Guild By Association: N.C.'s Aggressive Occupational Licensing Hurts Job Creation and Raises Consumer Costs | Eastern North Carolina Now

North Carolina features over 50 occupational licensing boards. The state licenses more occupations than most other states and is one of the more aggressive in licensing jobs for the poor or less educated.

ENCNow
   Publiher's note: Jon Sanders, who is Director of Regulatory Studies at the John Locke Foundation, is responsible for this post.

    •   North Carolina features over 50 occupational licensing boards. The state licenses more occupations than most other states and is one of the more aggressive in licensing jobs for the poor or less educated.

    •   At its core, an occupational license is a grant of permission from the government to an individual to enter the field of work he desires.

    •   The supposed purpose for occupational licensing is to ensure safety and quality. In practice, its motivation is to protect current members of a profession from competition and thereby make them wealthier. Its costs are dispersed among consumers and would-be professionals blocked from the field.

    •   Economists studying occupational licensing generally find it restricts the supply of labor and drives up the price of labor and services. They find similarity between licensure and medieval guilds.

    •   Licensing has grown tremendously. In the 1950s, nearly one in 20 workers needed a government license; now that number is approaching one in three.

    •   Research is mixed over whether licensing actually has a positive effect on safety or quality. States differ greatly over which occupations even need state licensure.

    •   Without state licensure, who would ensure safety and quality? Private providers of reviews and certification, internet sites and consumer applications, social media, and competitors and market forces. The government would still enforce safety and quality through the court system.

    This report recommends six ways to de-guild North Carolina's economy:

    1. Reduce the number of licensing boards and licensed job categories.
    2. Reform and merge licensing boards.
    3. Encourage reciprocity.
    4. Apply a principle of 'least-cost state.'
    5. Enact sunset provisions with periodic review for current licensing boards.
    6. Enact sunrise provisions for any future licensing board.

    Download PDF file: Guild By Association: N.C.'s Aggressive Occupational Licensing Hurts Job Creation and Raises Consumer Costs (745.6KB)
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Headed for another financial disaster John Locke Foundation Guest Editorial, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics Ugly Power Grabs vs. Pretty Ones


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

"Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a foolish man, full of foolish and vapid ideas," former Governor Chris Christie complained.
Bureaucrats believe they set policy for spending taxpayer dollars usurping the directions of elected officials.
would allow civil lawsuit against judge if released criminal causes harm
"This highly provocative move was designed to interfere with our counter narco-terror operations."

HbAD1

Charlie Kirk, 31 years of age, who was renowned as one of the most important and influential college speakers /Leaders in many decades; founder of Turning Point USA, has been shot dead at Utah Valley University.
The Trump administration took actions against Harvard related to the anti-Israel protests that roiled its campus.
In remembrance of the day that will forever seer the concept of 'evil' in our minds, let's look back at that fateful morning, exactly 11 years ago today to that series of horrific events which unfolded before our unbelieving eyes......

HbAD2

 
Back to Top