Occupational licensing of lawyers exists ostensibly to solve an information-asymmetry problem—certifying that a practitioner has passed a quality threshold—but it functions primarily as a supply-side entry barrier, since most states require graduation from an ABA-accredited law school plus passing a bar exam, and roughly half of applicants fail to get into accredited schools (an underestimate, since many are discouraged from applying).

causalpending

Speaker

Clifford Winston

Evidence Quote

you have to go to that law school and then after after finishing getting a degree then you got to take a bar examination

Source

Clifford Winston on Lawyers 09/5/2011EconTalk
Created: 6/15/2026, 9:26:52 AM

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