Why Is It So Hard to Become a Cosmetologist in USA

Just for a slight change of pace. confused confused confused

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The average cosmetologist in the U.S. trains for 372 days before earning a license. The average emergency medical technician spends 33 days in training. From this, one might conclude that Americans are obsessed with primping but tragically unprepared for emergencies.
Actually, the disparity merely confirms what a muddle the process of occupational licensing is. In 1952, fewer than 5 percent of U.S. workers required a state license. By 2006, according to a survey that year by the Gallup Organization, 29 percent of workers said they needed a government-issued license to do their job.
A study released in May by the libertarian Institute for Justice makes a compelling case that occupational licensing requirements in many states have run amok. Some licensees, including EMTs, have life-or-death responsibility. Others handle hazardous chemicals. Too many, however, are in occupations for which a natural inclination and a short apprenticeship should provide more than sufficient preparation. Why, for example, do florists, funeral attendants or shampooers need a license to work?
There is no consensus among states about which trades require licensing: Only 15 of 102 occupations evaluated by the researchers required licensing in 40 states or more. Nor does the regulatory overreach conform to red state/blue state stereotypes. Louisiana, Arizona and California subject the most occupations to licensing; Wyoming, Vermont and Kentucky the fewest. Nevada requires more than two years of training for barbers along with $140 in fees. Alabama requires nothing but a pair of scissors. One state or the other is deeply mistaken about the nature of the job.
In the Middle Ages, guilds emerged to establish quality standards for crafts, and to protect the craftsmen from competition. A similar phenomenon -- regulatory capture -- is at work in some state capitals, with occupational guilds lobbying pliant legislatures to restrict access to their fields. According to a 2009 study by the economists Morris Kleiner and Alan Krueger, an occupational license provides a wage boost of about 14 percent, roughly similar to the increase attributable to union membership.
Given the need for higher wages, especially among non- college-educated workers, such a boost may seem welcome. However, much of the work that genuinely warrants a license -- nurses are among the most commonly licensed professionals -- requires a college or associate’s degree. By imposing similarly onerous licensing restrictions on trades that are neither dangerous nor complex, state governments erect additional barriers to the prosperity of their poorest and least-educated citizens, who also end up paying higher costs as consumers of licensed services.
A dynamic economy requires regulations to keep commerce flowing smoothly. It also requires sufficient leeway to encourage small-business formation and entrepreneurship. That balance between regulation and free enterprise must be recalibrated from time to time. If it takes two years to get a barber’s license in your state, it’s time.
Thought i'd be a little different......
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Comments (17)

This actually makes sense to a forigner american sympathiser. this whole post pretty much explains why so many americans are unemployed. oh that and obama yes evreybody blame obama
Bill,
i was actually just writing this thinking how could anyone blame anyone for anything and you have done it already......confused frustrated frustrated doh doh
I am a Cosmetologist...a barber takes less time.....dunno
I saw this in a way that i could blame people
I think it al for Insurance dunno

Tooooooooooooooooooooooot uh oh
Calli,
a cosmologist I didn't think you were into Space stufflaugh
Nonsmoker...a world of space between my ears...lol.
@Calli laugh
Calliopesgirl
believe it or not i was actually thinking of yu when i was doing this.....blushing
NON
thought i would give the blogs a change of pace and write something that was supposed to be nonsensical but it ended up as such...confused confused doh
BILL<
thats alright, cswelcome blogs. Seems of late ppl are blaming others for all sorts of things, so you might as well as Obama to the list.rolling on the floor laughing
Simmo I like your style.
thumbs up
St.Elmo
always ready impart with his wisdom for our benefit.
thank you kind sir.
NON
thanks.cheers
WHy thank you Simmo...RIght now I am bowing out of doing hair because of the economy. I am most likely going to work at a Casino-I have Native American preference so I get hired first above caucasians in Reservation employment.
Great post, Simmo, and you are so right on. No wonder small business in hurting so much, what with taxes, regulations, competition, licensing, etc.

In Washington State, a cosmetologist needs one year of training, then they usually work for someone else. After a few years of working for others, they might be able to accumulate enough money to have their own shop.
Actually, it's 1,200 hours of training, which equates to about one year in most schools.
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by Simmo1
created Nov 2012
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