The Federal Trade Commission earlier this week voted to ban noncompete contracts for most workers in the United States. These contracts, research shows, depress wages, stifle entrepreneurial innovation and trap people in jobs they’d prefer to exit. Taken all together, says FTC head Lina Khan, they are “robbing people of their economic liberty.”
Who would want to be against economic freedom, not to mention raises for America’s workers? The answer is both Republican FTC commissioners and business interests. And in so doing, they proved that President Joe Biden’s FTC is calling out both the GOP and the business lobby on one of their biggest lies to workers: that they are defenders of economic liberty.
Since many workers can’t get by minus a salary, a noncompete leaves them effectively trapped in a job — which is almost certainly the point.
Noncompetes are contracts workers sign as a condition of employment that prevent them for working for competitors — often, but not always, within a certain geographic range — for a set period of time, sometimes up to several years, after leaving a workplace. Employers claim they need these contracts to protect everything from trade secrets to investments in training their workers. Since many workers can’t get by minus a salary, a noncompete leaves them effectively trapped in a job — which is almost certainly the point. They are, not surprisingly, widely loathed. An Ipsos poll taken last year found two-thirds of employed Americans want them banned.
These contracts were once relatively rare, used mostly for high-ranking executives and others who might possess corporate secrets they could pass on to business rivals. But over the past several decades, as American workers lost power, noncompete usage soared. It’s thought that about 18% of employees are currently working with such a contract while, at some point, 4 in 10 of us have been subject to them.
Their usage runs the gamut of the workforce, from doctors and veterinarians to fast food workers and baristas. Jimmy John’s famously subjected its sandwich makers to them, until media attention and the resulting public criticism that followed made it stop.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce — which claims its mission is to “advance human progress through an economic, political and social system based on individual freedom” — was among the first to file a lawsuit to put a stop to the noncompete ban. The FTC’s actions, the Chamber said in a statement, are “a blatant power grab that will undermine American businesses’ ability to remain competitive.” Please. The only blatant power grabs here were from America’s employers, who have used noncompetes for decades to avoid paying workers what they are worth. America’s businesses and their political enablers are just screaming mad they won’t be able to get away with it any longer.








