Occupational Licensing, Labor Mobility, and the Unfairness of Entry Standards

68 Pages Posted: 31 Jul 2018

See all articles by Mario Pagliero

Mario Pagliero

University of Turin - Department of Economics; University of Turin - Collegio Carlo Alberto

Date Written: July 2018

Abstract

The combination of occupational licensing at the local market level often coexists with labor mobility across local markets. We empirically study a labor market in which a district-specific entry (licensing) examination is coupled with labor mobility across districts. Our analysis exploits a change in the grading procedure of the exam, from grading in the local district to grading in a randomly assigned different district. We document that licensing regulation leads to extreme heterogeneity across markets in admission outcomes (up to 50 percent differences in licensing exam pass rates), unfair (discriminatory) admission procedures (up to 49 percent unfair exam results), and inefficient mobility of workers. These findings, together with the estimated impact of the reform on exam outcomes and grading standards, provide the first evidence of regulatory competition based on strategic interaction among licensing boards.

Keywords: bar exam, Labor market regulation, legal market, licensing, occupational regulation

JEL Classification: J08, J44, L50, L84

Suggested Citation

Pagliero, Mario, Occupational Licensing, Labor Mobility, and the Unfairness of Entry Standards (July 2018). CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP13076, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3222589

Mario Pagliero (Contact Author)

University of Turin - Department of Economics ( email )

Corso Unione Sovietica 218b
10134 Torino
Italy

University of Turin - Collegio Carlo Alberto ( email )

via Real Collegio 30
Moncalieri, Torino 10024
Italy

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