Pretty good report on the cost of licensing and how it affects jobs across states. IMO it makes it pretty clear that most of these licenses probably shouldn't exist and are nothing more than either a cash grab for local and/or state governments or a barrier to entry to protect existing companies from competition.https://www.ij.org/license-to-work-release-5-8-12
5/10/2012 2:24:30 PM
why go to a doctor when joe-blow can perform surgery for half the cost?
5/10/2012 2:25:50 PM
Business licenses started the Arab Spring revolutions. Some poor schmuck couldn't afford the bribe/license for his lemonade cart and decided to self-immolate.The right to go out and feed yourself is the type of thing men will kill for. It should be regulated with great caution.[Edited on May 10, 2012 at 2:32 PM. Reason : .]
5/10/2012 2:30:49 PM
5/10/2012 2:37:07 PM
Yup, couldn't even be bothered to watch the first 30 seconds of the video on the page. Well done.Exactly, smc. The dream of starting your own business, being your own boss, etc. can be incredibly difficult to attain with little to no reason in many cases. If you want a really interesting case study just look at moving companies or the battles over taxi companies and livery services. A lot of licensing is just blatant anti-competetive protectionism. It's hard to imagine anything much more fundamentally un-American.
5/10/2012 2:41:29 PM
I concur with the OP.
5/10/2012 2:58:54 PM
5/10/2012 3:19:42 PM
of course I couldn't be bothered to read the article. This conversation has been had a million times over, and people always take the extreme position on either end: A) Eliminate govt. intervention and let the market sort it out! or B) You have to have govt. interference to ensure fairness.These threads always devolve into an ideological pissing contest without ever examining the value of balance. Instead of trying to come to agreement on where to draw the line, the conversation always becomes dominated on whether that line should even exist.*jerk off motion*
5/10/2012 3:39:26 PM
5/10/2012 3:46:14 PM
on this board. yes...which is just further proof of our cultural shift from the center to the right in this country.
5/10/2012 3:47:10 PM
5/10/2012 4:09:15 PM
So what is it about landscaper regulation that's screwing up America? Do landscapers even need to be licensed in North Carolina? Wouldn't the founding fathers have been fine with NC doing whatever the fuck they want regarding requiring X profession to be regulated?
5/10/2012 4:14:14 PM
Try starting your own business, following all legal and regulatory procedures...You'll shortly realize why it needs to be changed. It's ridiculous how much regulation can jack up the cost of starting up.
5/10/2012 5:24:10 PM
I doubt the founders would have been fine with NC doing whatever the fuck they wanted regarding professional licensing standards. The founders had idealogical disagreements, but almost without exception they were strongly against government limiting the freedom of citizens to go about normal life without a damn good reason. In the case of most founders they would have been more ok with a state law than a national one, so yeah, I guess you're right on that count.The point is that these laws, in large part, serve no real purpose aside from limiting the freedom of citizens to work. They create artificial barriers to entry, they limit free enterprise, and they do very little to protect the public (which is almost always what they purport to do). They are bad laws. In a struggling economy which desperately needs small business to succeed they are crippling startup ventures which might otherwise create badly needed jobs.
5/10/2012 5:30:01 PM
Entrepreneurship solves social problems just as it grows the economy.I don't feel like we really have the ability to "encourage" entrepreneurship as much as stop discouraging it. I still think government can and should still go after the robber barons, and address inequality through things like an income tax, at least for the high tiers of income. But our problem is that people itching to change the world... can hardly move their legs for all the patents, codes, licenses, and god knows what else.
5/10/2012 5:55:09 PM
5/10/2012 8:00:02 PM
5/10/2012 8:54:16 PM
Sorry, I refuse to watch a video so ridiculous.
5/10/2012 10:39:14 PM
I do see the argument that some of these licensing requirements serve little purpose beyond establishing a sort of public cartel system in certain fields by serving as unesccessary barriers to entry for new competitors to the market. Proponents of these licensing requirements - existing players in a particular market for example - advocate for them as nescessary for either safety and or quality of service and suggest that maintaining those standards is a sufficiently compelling public interest. When the arguments in terms of safety are honest and placed in proper perspective then they can make compelling arguments for licensing requirements. Doctors, EMTs, electricians, and other occupations whose competence (or lack of) can directly impact the health and safety of the individuals they serve and sometimes more beyond them do seem like reasonable candidates for license requirements. As some have noted however, the strictness of license requirements sometimes appears to have a stronger inverse relationship with the excess demand for the service than it has a correlation to the actual compelling need to provide reasonable assurances of safety. In those cases - for example if it were true that it was more costly and difficult to become licensed as a hair-dresser than an EMT - I would suspect the primary purpose of the licensing is to protect the existing professionals from an influx of new competitors depressing the value of their labor. I... find that to be less than ideal.These sorts of professional licensing systems have tended to remind me quite a bit of the medieval trade guilds. They justify themselves to the consumers of their craft or service by arguing they maintain an assurance of a level of quality and service and justify themselves to their members by arguing that they allow them to keep their prices at more comfortable levels. This sounds like a win-win except that in both cases the hegemony of the system is not established or maintained on its merits alone; the trade guilds enforced their dominance by club, torch and intimidation and the professional certification regimes are maintined by force of law. Where the compelling public interest is real, the modern system is night and day compared to the medeival system. Where the primary motivation is to serve as a barrier to entry into the market, it's a much much kinder softer version of the medeival trade guilds' cartels - a public cartel vs a private cartel. So yeah I would be willing to consider rolling back some of the licensing which protects these public cartels if done judiciously and gradually (no point suddenly depressing the wages in a speciality at the cost of livelihoods when you could reduce the pain of correcting a market by doing it over time.) Transitioning those to non-governmental professional organizations might be better than over-night gutting. I would also be interested in examining some of the real and needed safety related licensing and consider whether an underserved demand for those experts had been responded to by loosening of licensing requirements where they may be other ways of stimulating growth of that talent pool besides cutting safety requirements.[Edited on May 11, 2012 at 12:06 AM. Reason : as]
5/11/2012 12:05:16 AM
5/11/2012 8:49:08 AM
Hair dresser safety training:1) don't run with scissors2) don't cut off ears
5/11/2012 8:53:24 AM
^^ To clarify, I don't necessarily disagree with its position, but it's a ridiculously shitty video. I did watch the first two minutes of it. It felt like watching a late night infomercial.]
5/11/2012 8:55:32 AM
5/11/2012 8:57:45 AM
5/11/2012 9:11:04 AM
Ah and the NC landscaping license exempts landscapers who perform less than $2500 in work per customer per year. So it's not about your gardener or the guy who cuts your grass (grass cutting is also exempted and doesn't count towards the exemption limit) but more towards people who would be doing jobs that involved more sizeable crews or actually changing drainage patterns I guess.
5/11/2012 9:15:34 AM
5/11/2012 9:21:16 AM
^^ Yes, but if licensing were a solution to these problems wouldn't you see more consistency in the requirements or at least whether or not a license is required for a given job? Most of these professions did not even require a license in half the states.Licensing itself doesn't do anything to create a safe environment or ensure quality. I have no problem with things like health inspections to ensure public safety, but having somebody fill out a form and pay $200 doesn't make their operation any safer.
5/11/2012 9:21:33 AM
5/11/2012 9:23:37 AM
^POLL TAX
5/11/2012 9:51:39 AM
What in the fuck does operating a crane or dangerous chemicals have to do with the right to vote?
5/11/2012 9:53:39 AM
5/11/2012 9:54:19 AM
Yeah, that's what I said. Every single employee in these companies need to be licensed.
5/11/2012 9:57:20 AM
5/11/2012 10:02:55 AM
5/11/2012 10:17:57 AM
Part of the licensing is to be responsible for your employees and their actions. What's wrong with this model? You could lose your license for unsanitary employees so you're motivated to keep them sanitary.
5/11/2012 11:21:01 AM
So that could apply to pretty much all of these examples then.The restaurant owner needs a business license, a part of which probably relies on sanitation, thus the owner holds employees accountable and there are no barriers to employment beyond the owner.Now, why can't it be the same for a salon?
5/11/2012 12:01:15 PM
5/11/2012 12:29:35 PM
5/11/2012 2:13:49 PM
^^Well any horror story I have is going to sound stupid compared to a life and death emt horror story and I realize that. My argument isn't that cosmetology is just as critical/important/whatever as ems. Unless you can say for sure that you can take an average group of aspiring cosmetologist and put them through the same "amount" of training as emts go through and get out a similar number of proficient/safe cosmetologist, then you are comparing apple to oranges... or cosmetologist to emts. Yes cosmetology is a broad profession but so is mechanical engineering (and probably many other professions that others, including myself, may be inclined to discount).Also, if you think a hair dresser charges your gf/wife/mother $150 to open a box of color from walmart and follow directions, I don't know what to tell you. I used to be the same way. As far as needing a license to do it for somebody else, the best thing I can come up with is an analogy: Since a 14 year old boy can drive his dad's farm truck (on private property) then he should be allowed to drive a city bus without a license.
5/11/2012 2:42:38 PM
The question is who decides. In the case of the pickup trick, it might be stupid for the farmer to let his 21 year old son drive the truck, depending on his driving history, and perfectly fine to let his 14 year old. That the 21 year old managed to get a state issued drivers license doesn't mean he can drive stick or handle the rough terrain of the farm. It is the farmer that faces the liability if the kid hits a neighbors fence and destroys the truck. Now we're talking about hair. Just because someone jumps through the hoops and gets a license doesn't mean they too can be trusted by the salon owner. It is the salon which faces the liability if the stylist damages someones hair. But there is a perverse side to licensing. The licenses are expensive and require jumping through hoops. Some competent stylists will either refuse or fail. This means there will be fewer competent stylists available to work. Which means some salon owner somewhere is going to keep on an employee they suspect might be unsafe and would otherwise let go, but it has become just too difficult to find a licensed replacement.
5/11/2012 3:49:10 PM
5/11/2012 6:10:13 PM
5/11/2012 10:22:11 PM
5/13/2012 3:36:14 PM
5/14/2012 8:35:28 AM
This reminds me of that lady who was injecting random stuff into peoples butt tissue to make them have bigger butts
5/14/2012 9:13:22 AM
After thinking about it some I might waffle on this issue, maybe a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. An established cosmetologist isn't going to be hurting much because there have always been cheaper options out there. It may shift around the responsibility of facilities for the ones that rent chairs in salons (unless you are talking about keeping the salon licensing the same), but the worst case scenario is the building owner(s) have to better screen tenants, or employees in the case of a chain. I guess if the owners spend time/money screening more (or dealing with more unacceptable cosmetologist), then rent will be higher or wages will be lower. It's probably a wash from the cosmetologist's financial standpoint since they won't be paying licensing fees or necessarily for formal education. That or the owners could only hire/rent to cosmetologist with proven results and/or a formal education to limit their own liability, but I doubt those savings are passed on to the clientele (a cosmetologist with a better education or success will command more money). The real benefit is a young enterprising hair stylist can open up shop and cut hair on the back porch or kitchen or whatever and honestly I find nothing wrong with that. I mean if she can generate enough business to open a salon or rent a chair at an established one, without a formal education, then more power to her.So what about barbers? Do you think you should need an education to shave another person's face/neck with a straight razor or should that same chick cutting hair in her kitchen be allowed to do that too? Serious question btw, in case you didn't know (I just learned it myself) the barbering license is totally different (different board and everything in nc) even though there are many overlapping areas. The whole thing reeks of a pissing contest between the two professions.
5/15/2012 1:59:29 PM