Because most people are not "valuable people", nor are they your security clearance person doing useless work for a year while they wait for their clearance to go through. They get hired to work a process, and if they leave it's to work a process somewhere else. We're long past the days of Mr. Fezziiwig training his young apprentices to possibly take over the business when he retires.
Besides, companies try very hard to make their employees believe they are replaceable cogs, so what is even the purpose of non-competes if that is so? If they are replaceable, then how can harm be done by them leaving to work for someone else? If harm is done, then why the charade of making them think they're replaceable cogs?
Then maybe employers should have only used them for the handful of employees where they would actually be beneficial instead of making them a standard term of employment for everyone.
Instead they abused the concept so much they made it so the government said they don't get to use it anymore. Hard to feel much pity about that.
As if all employers were the same. But you shouldn't feel pity for them, you should feel regret for the oncoming mediocrity that always follows trying to protect people from being able to make poor choices.
Without that 10 you're losing innovation. How much? My personal experience with companies that probably wouldn't have existed or been successful without non-compete (or equivalent) says quite a lot.
Just to protect people from making bad decisions?
I'll leave you with the FTC announcement. According to this there's nothing good about non-compete clauses at all. No issue like this is entirely black and white and when somebody tells you it is they're lying and have some agenda; for instance they say banning non-compete "would close racial and gender wage gaps".
Because most people are not "valuable people", nor are they your security clearance person doing useless work for a year while they wait for their clearance to go through. They get hired to work a process, and if they leave it's to work a process somewhere else. We're long past the days of Mr. Fezziiwig training his young apprentices to possibly take over the business when he retires.
Besides, companies try very hard to make their employees believe they are replaceable cogs, so what is even the purpose of non-competes if that is so? If they are replaceable, then how can harm be done by them leaving to work for someone else? If harm is done, then why the charade of making them think they're replaceable cogs?
The answer to your questions here is that sometimes non-compete is a good thing and sometimes it's abusive.
That's why the answer isn't a blanket ban on them.
Then maybe employers should have only used them for the handful of employees where they would actually be beneficial instead of making them a standard term of employment for everyone.
Instead they abused the concept so much they made it so the government said they don't get to use it anymore. Hard to feel much pity about that.
As if all employers were the same. But you shouldn't feel pity for them, you should feel regret for the oncoming mediocrity that always follows trying to protect people from being able to make poor choices.
I've spent most of my career working for companies in jurisdictions where non-competes are legally unenforceable, so I doubt much will change for me.
I think the difference is if the abusive to non abusive was 50:50 then it would be kinda fine, but it’s more like 90:10.
You're talking cost/benefit.
Without that 10 you're losing innovation. How much? My personal experience with companies that probably wouldn't have existed or been successful without non-compete (or equivalent) says quite a lot.
Just to protect people from making bad decisions?
I'll leave you with the FTC announcement. According to this there's nothing good about non-compete clauses at all. No issue like this is entirely black and white and when somebody tells you it is they're lying and have some agenda; for instance they say banning non-compete "would close racial and gender wage gaps".