Posted by Todd Zywicki:
10TH CIRCUIT UPHOLDS FUNERAL DIRECTOR'S MONOPOLY ON CASKET SALES:

   Disappointing decision by the 10th Circuit in [1]Powers v. Oklahoma
   this week upholding Oklahoma's law permitting only licensed funeral
   directors to sell caskets. Why someone would need a to embalm 25
   bodies, pass a licensing examination, and complete a specified
   60-credit program of undergraduate training for the required funeral
   director's license just to sell a box remains unclear to me. Indeed,
   given the complete lack of any link between box-selling and embalming,
   it is surprising that the funeral home directors don't just go ahead
   and have their monopoly extend to all forms of box-selling, including
   cardboard boxes and luggage.
   These restrictions have always struck me as especially distasteful, in
   that these guys mark up their caskets by a couple hundred percent and
   take advantage of people who may be grieving. To add insult to injury,
   the price-gouging morticians defend their practices by saying that
   they are proctecting people in their time of need.
   One of the more disturbing aspects about this opinion is that it
   suggests that protecting an interest-group from economic competition
   is itself a legitimate government purpose. "In contrast, the Supreme
   Court has consistently held that protecting or favoring one particular
   intrastate industry, absent a specific federal constitutional or
   statutory violation, is a legitimate state interest." On the other
   hand, there is a refreshing honesty to the court's characterization of
   the realities of the political process (especially when it comes to
   regulation of the licensed professions): "We also note, in passing,
   that while baseball may be the national pastime of the citizenry,
   dishing out special economic benefits to certain in-state industries
   remains the favored pastime of state and local governments." The court
   goes on to state, however, "While the creation of such a libertarian
   paradise may be a worthy goal, Plaintiffs must turn to the Oklahoma
   electorate for its institution, not us."
   In fact, according to FTC studies of the funeral industry, it turns
   out that in many families there is one person who essentially
   specializes in buying funerals--i.e., "Uncle Joe" or "Aunt Sue"
   handles all the funeral arrangements for family funerals. So in fact
   the decision-maker can and will shop--if given the chance. These sorts
   of laws like the Oklahoma decision in Powers instead just deliver up
   consumers to get ripped-off by a licensed monopoply. And it has been
   well-recognized since at least Mancur Olson that the political process
   is likely to fail in exactly this situation--where there is a delivery
   of concentrated benefits to a well-organized interest group and the
   costs are borne by dispersed consumers as a whole who lack the
   incentive and ability to organize themselves to overturn these
   regulations. Indeed, in this situation the incentives would appear to
   be even more attenuated, in that purchase of funeral goods and
   services is at best a rare shopping incursion, distinguishing it from
   such goods and services as plumbers, lawyers, and doctors.
   The 10th Circuit's opinion creates a circuit split with the 6th
   Circuit's decision in Craigmiles v. Giles, 312 F.3d 220 (6th Cir.
   2002), so perhaps this will make the issue ripe for Supreme Court
   cert.
   A nice summary and analysis is provided by Fritz Schrank at
   [2]sneakingsuspicions.com, who brought the decision to my attention.

References

   1. http://laws.lp.findlaw.com/10th/036014.html
   2. http://www.sneakingsuspicions.com/a08222804.htm#082404

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