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Policy Brief: Licensing Barriers for Women in the Workforce

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  • Policy Brief: Licensing Barriers for Women in the Workforce

Policy Brief: Licensing Barriers for Women in the Workforce

Policy Brief: Licensing Barriers for Women in the Workforce

 

Dr. Darwyyn Deyo

 

Occupational licensing can disproportionately impact women twice over, both as members of the labor force and as regular consumers of higher cost services from licensed occupations.

Direct costs from licensing requirements for women seeking to work in these occupations can raise barriers to entry in the labor market, either as new entrants or when re-entering the labor market. However, aspiring workers face these barriers within occupations together. In contrast, the extent to which the occupations that women are more likely to work in are disproportionately licensed can particularly impact women’s labor market outcomes and access. This policy brief is the first to categorize the extent to which states impose occupational licensing on predominantly female occupations, with recommendations for reforms.

Find the entire Policy Brief Here

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Alicia Plemmons
Alicia Plemmons

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Over One in Five

Estimates suggest that more than one in five workers (approximately 22%) in the United States is directly impacted by occupational regulation, a percentage that has grown from 5% in the 1950s.

Research Conferences

In addition to developing a national database of occupational regulation that is freely available to the public, the Knee Center also organizes panels at national research conferences and prepares research reports on the subject.

Licensing Reform

The Knee Center supports the establishment of a framework for licensing reform that encourages a thoughtful approach to licensing and results in a regulatory environment that better serves the public interest.

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