> law school is so expensive, it is harder to become a lawyer. If less people become lawyers, the supply decreases (resulting in the demand for the shortage of lawyers to be greater).
Despite the expense of law school, there are about 25-35k jobs per year for 40-45k graduates per year. And maybe 5k per year of those pay the kind of salaries people think lawyers make. What keeps supply limited in law is that the growth of supply is gated by the amount of legal work in the economy. Law is unlike engineering in that nobody wants to hire fresh grads. They want the seasoned veterans who have been to trials or handled a big deal. Preferably a bunch of them. There is only so much of that work to go around, which bottlenecks the supply pipeline in the stage between fresh graduate to employable lawyer.
The moral of the story is that economic systems are more complicated than simple neoclassical tropes admit.
Despite the expense of law school, there are about 25-35k jobs per year for 40-45k graduates per year. And maybe 5k per year of those pay the kind of salaries people think lawyers make. What keeps supply limited in law is that the growth of supply is gated by the amount of legal work in the economy. Law is unlike engineering in that nobody wants to hire fresh grads. They want the seasoned veterans who have been to trials or handled a big deal. Preferably a bunch of them. There is only so much of that work to go around, which bottlenecks the supply pipeline in the stage between fresh graduate to employable lawyer.
The moral of the story is that economic systems are more complicated than simple neoclassical tropes admit.