November 10, 2008 National Data, By Edwin S. RubensteinThe High Cost of Diversity—Due To Go Up Under Obama
On
Neither
Barack Obama nor (needless
to say) John McCain touched upon this point. Most
press commentaries did not go beyond the obvious. A
typical analysis observed that
"by the middle of this century, the United States will be a distinctly
greyer country." [America's
whites will become minority by 2042, says census bureau,
By David Usborne,
Independent,
August 15, 2008] The
New York Times
played down the racial angle, noting that
"Most people who
describe their origin or heritage as Hispanic or Latino
also identify themselves as white." In fact,
says the Times, the number of citizens who identify as white will increase by
a stunning 80 million by 2042, and their percentage of
the population will drop only slightly, from 79 percent
to 74 percent. [A
Nation of None and All of the Above,
By
Sam Roberts, August 16, 2008] Well, as
the saying goes,
"color is only
skin deep".
In fact,
this demographic shift will have a profound effect on
all aspects of American life—not the least of which will
be the economic drag associated with this
transformation.
The economic burden falls hardest on
non-Hispanic whites who, as a group, are
disadvantaged by policies aimed at increasing
diversity. It is increasingly clear—especially at a time
when minorities are
bearing the brunt of sub-prime mortgage defaults—that
the putative beneficiaries of diversity-based programs
are also hurt. Indeed, the unintended consequences
of race-based preferences may be one of the stories
never told.
Peter
Brimelow, writing with co-author Leslie Spencer
several years ago in
Forbes, calculated the cumulative affirmative action cost to the
If Brimelow’s four percent figure is accurate (and to my
knowledge no one has ever challenged it), then the cost
of affirmative action programs would currently be about
$540 billion.
But fifteen years have passed since Brimelow made his
calculation. Even if the same programs were in place,
their impact would be larger today because they have
been in existence longer. The economic cost of
affirmative action compounds annually, as the growth
path of the economy increasingly diverges from its
potential.
Bottom line: The misallocation that cost 4 percent of
that GDP in 1991 could easily cost 8 percent GDP today
(2007). That implies a $1.1
trillion
economic loss from affirmative action programs—a whopping
$3,667 taken from every man, woman, and child in the
country.
In a study recent
published by the
National Policy Institute, I estimated the cost and
benefits of affirmative action programs by race:
The
biggest losers are Asians, who lose an estimated
$40,000 per family. This amount reflects the taxes,
compliance costs, and—most importantly—the loss of
income associated with being on the wrong side of the
affirmative action playing field.
White families lose about half as much as their Asian
counterparts, while Hispanics benefit
even more than blacks.
Proponents of race based preferences claim that the
benefits of such programs outweigh their costs. Ending,
or at least reducing, discrimination in hiring and pay
practices is surely a benefit worth paying for.
Yet many economists believe discrimination is rare or
non-existent in a capitalist economy such as ours.
Gary Becker,
a 1992
Nobel laureate, exposed the flawed rationale behind
affirmative action programs in The Economics of Discrimination
(Similarly, economists were skeptical that
mortgage lenders would discriminate against
credit-worthy, and therefore potentially profitable,
minorities. But
bipartisan pressure from government forced the
mortgage lenders to extend credit to marginal minorities
anyway—with the
disastrous results we now see.)
This process can be forestalled only by monopoly or
government intervention—both of which occurred, for
example, in
South Africa under apartheid. And in the
The welfare/affirmative lobby does not like to hear
this. But the evidence clearly supports Becker. As
Brimelow and Spencer wrote:
" ‘Once adjustments are made for factors like age,
education and experience, 70% to 85% of the observed
differences in income and employment between the various
groups in America disappears,’ says economist Howard R.
Bloch of
Harvard economist Richard B. Freeman
found blacks and whites with the same backgrounds
and education had achieved wage parity by 1969, well
before quotas had
For
female black college graduates, the gap more than
vanishes. Joseph Conti reports in
Profiles of a New
Black Vanguard that
"black
college-educated females currently earn
125 percent of what white college educated females
earn." [Ralph R. Reiland,
Affirmative Action or Equal Opportunity?,
Regulation,
Vol. 18, no. 3, 1995.]
All of which shows the fallacy underlying affirmative
action in the American labor market.
The programs may even be counter-productive. Since the
onset of affirmative action in the 1960s, the
employment-population ratio for black workers has
deteriorated relative to that of whites and Hispanics.
This could reflect the over-representation of blacks in
manufacturing and other declining sectors of the
economy. But the affirmative action programs themselves,
by increasing the
threat of lawsuits brought by employees in protected
groups, could be a factor.
Case in point: the 1991 Civil Rights Act. The
legislation significantly expanded the rights of
plaintiffs in discrimination complaints to the EEOC and
in federal civil court. In particular, the Act made it
easier to use statistical evidence, however
flawed and misleading, to
"prove" discriminatory intent even when no
discriminatory intent is evident on the part of the
employer.
To avoid the threat of lawsuits, many
There was a brief moment after the Republicans won
control of Congress in 1994 when it looked like they
just might do something about Affirmative Action. (
Under
President Obama, Affirmative Action
is likely to be further entrenched. Next time,
Republicans will have to be braver—if there is a next
time. Edwin S. Rubenstein (email him) is President of ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis. |
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