That is true for every field, the skills required to do anything is increasingly specialized.
My grandfather became a pharmacist by simply apprenticing to one and then later owning a pharmacy. My mom had to only do a 3-year course, today it would be lot more difficult than that.
You can call it red-tap or code, we have learnt a lot over the last centuries, we put these regulations to protect the average consumer. Sometimes it is overkill, but most regulations have been payed for in blood. Aviation is very visible example.
> That is true for every field, the skills required to do anything is increasingly specialized.
I think OP's main point is that the majority of the regulated process is not necessary for his project. I would guess OP went through the whole process, and felt that the checks and examinations probably did not do much good to himself or the future home buyers. Thus the outrageous cost becomes an issue, because with the cost, the value is not justifiable.
As for pharmacist, I would totally agree that modern medicine is exponentially more complex than 30 years ago, and that's in a good way: the mechanism of how the medicine works are more advanced, variety increases exponentially, cost is down and more people are using more medicines.
Comparably, building a house has not been much different than what's in 1970s. Aside from newer materials in components, the house building is largely equivalent to what's in 1970s. I got this impression from my own house that is built in 1972, and watching the new building materials been used now on YouTube.
My grandfather became a pharmacist by simply apprenticing to one and then later owning a pharmacy. My mom had to only do a 3-year course, today it would be lot more difficult than that.
You can call it red-tap or code, we have learnt a lot over the last centuries, we put these regulations to protect the average consumer. Sometimes it is overkill, but most regulations have been payed for in blood. Aviation is very visible example.