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In March 2022, then-Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan unveiled a “first-in-the-nation” program rolling back degree requirements for thousands of government jobs. 

The move was part of an effort to fill a large number of position vacancies. Since then, at least 19 other states have followed suit, either by approving policies to evaluate whether degree requirements should be removed or by nixing them altogether. 

Policymakers expect for these moves to help fill state government vacancies by providing new job opportunities for workers who didn’t attend four years of college. 

They could also act as signals to private sector employers, encouraging them to not only rely on four-year degrees, but also look at other measures of skills, Tameshia Bridges Mansfield, vice president of workforce and regional economies at the Jobs for the Future, said in an email. 

That opens the door for jobs and advancement to more people, Bridges Mansfield said. However, even though these policies prop up workers without degrees, some experts say the changes won’t lessen the importance of a college diploma, which will continue to factor into hiring decisions and pay rates. 

Employers will likely continue to strongly value degrees when they’re hiring, regardless of what state or private employers list in job descriptions, Ben Wildavsky, a higher education expert and visiting scholar at the University of Virginia, said in an email.

“Higher education certainly isn’t perfect, but we have a lot of reason to believe that degrees command a wage premium because graduates develop a range of broad and targeted skills that are really useful for developing strong careers,” he said. 

What’s driving the trend?

Over the past decade, degree requirements in job descriptions have helped employers filter out the hundreds of online applications they receive, said Ryan Craig, managing director of Achieve Partners and author of the book “Apprentice Nation.” 

Companies use applicant tracking systems that match keywords in resumes with those in the job description, filtering out those with insufficient match rates, Craig said. “Bachelor’s degree” was an important search term in job descriptions that helped narrow down the applicant pool to a manageable number — preventing those without degrees from getting seen, he said. 

But an ongoing labor crunch is driving a bipartisan policy movement to drop degree requirements, Nicole Smith, chief economist at Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce, said in an email. Unemployment is low — holding below 4% since January 2022 — leaving many state jobs unfilled for long periods of time, she said. 

Moreover, a growing number of private sector employers dropped bachelor’s degree requirements for many middle-skill and some higher-skill roles amid the COVID-19 pandemic. That includes positions at companies such as IBM, Accenture, Google and Delta Air Lines.

Between 2019 and 2022, a growing number of employers emphasized skills over degrees in their job listings on LinkedIn, a recent study by the social media company found. 

Across many industries, paid job listings that did not require a degree grew on the platform at a much faster rate than those that did — 354% faster in financial services, 282% faster in accommodation and food services, and 240% faster in technology, information, and media.

But loosened degree requirements haven’t necessarily translated to hiring decisions. According to the Linkedin study, growth in hiring nondegree workers in those sectors was much slower than the listings might suggest. 

Accommodation and food service hires without professional degrees grew just 11% faster than those with them, financial services hires without degrees grew 6% faster, and technology, information, and media hires without degrees only grew 3% faster. 


Danielle McLean

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