Release Date: Mar 02, 2011Contact: 888-249-NEWS
U.S Chamber Study Shows States Could Create Nearly 750,000 Jobs and 50,000 New Businesses by Streamlining Employment Regulations
Offers Policymakers a Roadmap for an Essentially Free Shot of Economic Stimulus
WASHINGTON, D.C. —The U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Workforce Freedom Initiative today released a study, conducted by Seyfarth Shaw LLP and Navigant Economics, revealing that states with the largest burden of labor and employment regulation are sacrificing opportunities to reduce their unemployment rate and generate new business startups.
The study shows that if each state were to improve their regulatory climates to the level discussed in the report, the effect would be equivalent to a one-time boost of 746,462 net new jobs nationwide. Moreover, the rate of new business formation would increase by 12%, resulting in the creation of 51,590 new firms nationally each year. Reducing the burden of labor and employment regulation in the states could act as a free shot of economic stimulus — equal to approximately seven months of job creation at the current average rate.
“Without cost to state governments or the federal government — or the taxpayers — states can take steps now to improve their economic conditions and begin to prime the pump of job creation and new business formation,” said Lisa Rickard, president of the Workforce Freedom Initiative. “The goal of this study is to provide state policymakers with an objective view of how policies in their states compare with policies in other states, and perhaps more importantly, how reforms can accelerate economic growth.”
To conduct the study, Seyfarth Shaw surveyed states’ labor and employment policies across six broad categories: the employment relationship and the cost of separation; minimum wage and living wage laws; unemployment insurance and workers compensation; wage and hour policies; collective bargaining issues; and the litigation/enforcement climate. Within those broad categories, they examined 34 individual policy areas.
Based on the results of Seyfarth Shaw’s survey, Navigant Economics developed an Employment Regulation Index (ERI) to sort the state into one of three tiers: good, fair, or poor, to reflect their overall regulatory environment. Fifteen states are in the “good” category, 20 in the “fair” category, and 15 in the “poor” category. Individual factors that contributed to a state’s ranking are discussed in state-specific summaries. Navigant then performed an econometric analysis to measure the impact of a state’s ERI ranking on two key economic variables: the unemployment rate and new business formation.
In interpreting the ERI and the overall state rankings, it is important to note that achieving a “perfect” score on the ERI does not mean a lack of regulation in the labor and employment contexts and the study does not advocate for such an outcome. Federal law, for example, provides a multitude of workplace standards on its own.
“Governors across the country from both parties are looking at ways to encourage economic growth in their states, and reform of state labor and employment regulations could make an important contribution to returning the U.S. to a more rapid-growth trajectory,” concluded Rickard.
A full copy of the study including methodology can be viewed at: http://www.uschamber.com/reports/impact-state-employment-policies-job-growth-50-state-review
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is the world’s largest business federation representing the interests of more than 3 million businesses of all sizes, sectors, and regions, as well as state and local chambers and industry associations.
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