An Ignored 'Disparity'
by Thomas Sowell
Recently
by Thomas Sowell: Kodak
and the Post Office
With all the
talk about "disparities" in innumerable contexts, there is one very
important disparity that gets remarkably little attention – disparities
in the ability to create wealth. People who are preoccupied, or
even obsessed, with disparities in income are seldom interested
much, or at all, in the disparities in the ability to create wealth,
which are often the reasons for the disparities in income.
In a market
economy, people pay us for benefiting them in some way – whether
we are sweeping their floors, selling them diamonds or anything
in between. Disparities in our ability to create benefits for which
others will pay us are huge, and the skills required can develop
early – or sometimes not at all.
A recent national
competition among high school students who create their own technological
advances turned up an especially high share of such students winning
recognition in the San Francisco Bay Area. A closer look showed
that the great majority of these Bay Area students had Asian names.
Asian Americans
are a substantial presence in this region but they are by no means
a majority, much less such an overwhelming majority as they are
among those winning high tech awards.
This pattern
of disproportionate representation of particular groups among those
with special skills and achievements is not confined to Asian Americans
or even to the United States.
It is a phenomenon
among particular racial, ethnic or other groups in countries around
the world – the Ibos in Nigeria, the Parsees in India, the Armenians
in the Ottoman Empire, Germans in Brazil, Chinese in Malaysia, Lebanese
in West Africa, Tamils in Sri Lanka. The list goes on and on.
Gross inequalities
in skills and achievements have been the rule, not the exception,
on every inhabited continent and for centuries on end. Yet our laws
and government policies act as if any significant statistical difference
between racial or ethnic groups in employment or income can only
be a result of their being treated differently by others.
Nor is this
simply an opinion. Businesses have been sued by the government when
the representation of different groups among their employees differs
substantially from their proportions in the population at large.
But, no matter how the human race is broken down into its components
– whether by race, sex, geographic region or whatever – glaring
disparities in achievements have been the rule, not the exception.
Anyone who
watches professional basketball games knows that the star players
are by no means a representative sample of the population at large.
The book "Human Accomplishment" by Charles Murray is a huge compendium
of the top achievements around the world in the arts and sciences,
as well as in sports and other fields.
Nowhere have
these achievements been random or representative of the demographic
proportions of the population of a country or of the world. Nor
have they been the same from one century to the next. China was
once far more advanced technologically than any country in Europe,
but then it fell behind and more recently is gaining ground.
Most professional
golfers who participate in PGA tournaments have never won a single
tournament, but Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods have
each won dozens of tournaments.
Yet these and
numerous other disparities in achievement are resolutely ignored
by those whose shrill voices denounce disparities in rewards, as
if these disparities are somehow suspicious at best and sinister
at worst.
Higher achieving
groups – whether classes, races or whatever – are often blamed for
the failure of other groups to achieve. Politicians and intellectuals,
especially, tend to conceive of social questions in terms that allow
them to take on the role of being on the side of the angels against
the forces of evil.
This can be
a huge disservice to those individuals and groups who are lagging
behind, for it leads them to focus on a sense of grievance and victimhood,
rather than on how they can lift themselves up instead of trying
to pull other people down.
Again, this
is a worldwide phenomenon – a sad commentary on the down side of
the brotherhood of man.
One of the
ways of trying to reduce the vast disparities in economic success,
which are common in countries around the world, is by making higher
education more widely available, even for people without the money
to pay for it.
This can be
both a generous investment and a wise investment for a society to
make. But, depending on how it is done, it can also be a foolish
and even dangerous investment, as many societies around the world
have learned the hard way.
When institutions
of higher learning turn out highly qualified doctors, scientists,
engineers and others with skills that can raise the standard of
living of a whole society and make possible a better and longer
life, the benefits are obvious.
What is not
so obvious, but is painfully true nonetheless, is that colleges
and universities can also turn out vast numbers of people with credentials,
but with no marketable skills with which to fulfill their expectations.
There is nothing magic about simply being in ivy-covered buildings
for four years.
Statistics
are often thrown around in the media, showing that people with college
degrees earn higher average salaries than people without them. But
such statistics lump together apples and oranges – and lemons.
A decade after
graduation, people whose degrees were in a hard field like engineering
earned twice as much as people whose degrees were in the ultimate
soft field, education. Nor is a degree from a prestigious institution
a guarantee of a big pay-off, especially not for those who failed
to specialize in subjects that would give them skills valued in
the real world.
But that is
not even half the story. In countries around the world, people with
credentials but no marketable skills have been a major source of
political turmoil, social polarization and ideologically driven
violence, sometimes escalating into civil war.
People with
degrees in soft subjects, which impart neither skills nor a realistic
understanding of the world, have been the driving forces behind
many extremist movements with disastrous consequences.
These include
what a noted historian called the "well-educated but underemployed"
Czech young men who promoted ethnic identity politics in the 19th
century, which led ultimately to historic tragedies for both Czechs
and Germans in 20th century Czechoslovakia. It was much the same
story of soft-subject "educated" but unsuccessful young men who
promoted pro-fascist and anti-Semitic movements in Romania in the
1930s.
The targets
have been different in different countries but the basic story has
been much the same. Those who cannot compete in the marketplace,
despite their degrees, not only resent those who have succeeded
where they have failed, but push demands for preferential treatment,
in order to negate the "unfair" advantages that others have.
Similar attempts
to substitute political favoritism for developing one's own skills
and achievements have been common as well in India, Nigeria, Malaysia,
Fiji, Sri Lanka and throughout Central Europe and Eastern Europe
between the two World Wars.
Such political
movements cannot promote their agendas without demonizing others,
thereby polarizing whole societies. Time and again, their targets
have been those who have the skills and achievements that they lack.
When they achieve their ultimate success, forcing such people out
of the country, as in Uganda in the 1970s or Zimbabwe more recently,
the whole economy can collapse.
Against this
international background, the current class warfare rhetoric in
American politics and ethnic grievance ideology in our schools and
colleges, can be seen as the dangerous things they are. Those who
are pushing such things may be seeking nothing more than votes for
themselves or some unearned group benefits at other people's expense.
But they are playing with dynamite.
The semi-literate
sloganizing of our own Occupy Wall Street mobs recalls the distinction
that Milton Friedman often made between those who are educated and
those who have simply been in schools. Generating more such people,
in the name of expanding education, may serve the interests of the
Obama administration but hardly the interests of America.
Anyone who
has ever been in a Third World country, or even in a slum neighborhood
at home, is likely to wonder why there can be such dire poverty
among some people, while others are prospering.
Both politicians
and intellectuals have tended to have simple answers to that question,
even if these simple answers have been different in different eras.
A hundred years
ago, the prevailing answer was that some people are innately and
genetically inferior. Not only was this answer thundered from political
platforms in redneck dialect by politicians in the Jim Crow South,
the same message was delivered in cultured and lofty tones from
academic podiums in the most prestigious colleges and universities
across the country.
Nor was this
unique to the United States. In Britain, a study of high-achieving
families by Francis Galton, a cousin of Charles Darwin, concluded
that the reason for their achievements was genetic superiority.
From there it was a short step to seeing various races as genetically
superior and inferior.
More ominously,
Galton saw those who were inferior as a drag on society who should
be eliminated. As often happens when a big idea seizes the imagination
of the intelligentsia, their strongest argument is that there is
no argument – that "science" has already proved what they believe.
As Sir Francis
Galton put it: "there exists a sentiment, for the most part quite
unreasonable, against the gradual extinction of an inferior race."
The idea that
those with different views had only "sentiment" on their side, while
he had science, was common among intellectuals on both sides of
the Atlantic.
Eugenics –
a term Galton coined – became a crusading creed, and eugenics societies
were set up by such stellar intellectuals as John Maynard Keynes,
H.G. Wells and George Bernard Shaw in England. In the United States
there were 376 college courses devoted to eugenics in American colleges
and universities in 1928.
By the end
of the 20th century, the pendulum had swung to the opposite end
of the spectrum. Now differences in achievements among classes,
races or the sexes were seen as being a result of discriminatory
treatment. And, again, as with the intelligentsia of the Progressive
era, those with different views were dismissed with a word – often
"racist" now, as compared to "sentimental" in the earlier period.
But in neither era were views different from the crusading creed
of the day seriously engaged.
In our supposedly
more enlightened time, it became dangerous even to express differing
views on the subject on leading college and university campuses.
A very fundamental
question was seldom asked, in either the earlier or the later period:
Was there ever any realistic reason to expect the same achievements
among races, classes or other subdivisions of the human species?
Could we really
have expected Eskimos to have the same ability to grow pineapples
as the people of Hawaii had? Could the Bedouins of the Sahara really
know as much about fishing as the Polynesians of the Pacific? Could
the people of the Himalayas have the same seafaring skills as people
living in ports around the Mediterranean?
On a more general
level, could people living in isolated mountain valleys realistically
be expected to develop their own intellectual potential as fully
as people living in cities that were international crossroads of
commerce, cultures and ideas from around the world?
When the Spaniards
discovered the Canary Islands in the 15th century, they found people
of a Caucasian race living at a stone age level. Isolation and backwardness
have gone together in many parts of the world, regardless of the
race of the people involved.
Historical
happenstances – the fact that the Romans invaded Western Europe
but not Eastern Europe, for example – left a legacy of written languages
in Western Europe that people in Eastern Europe did not have until
centuries later.
But the innumerable
factors affecting human achievements are not only complex and hard
to untangle, they offer neither politicians nor intellectuals the
opportunity to simply be on the side of the angels against the forces
of evil. Factors which present no opportunity to star in a moral
melodrama have often been ignored in favor of factors that do.
Different histories,
geography, demography and cultures have left various groups, races,
nations and civilizations with radically different abilities to
create wealth.
In centuries
past, the majority population of various cities in Eastern Europe
consisted of people from Western Europe – Germans, Jews and others
– while the vast majority of the population in the surrounding countrysides
were Slavs or other indigenous peoples of the region.
Just as Western
Europe was – and is – more prosperous than Eastern Europe, so Western
Europeans living in Eastern European cities in centuries past were
more prosperous than the Slavs and others living in the countrysides,
or even in the same cities.
One of the
historic advantages of Western Europe was that it was conquered
by the Romans in ancient times – a traumatic experience in itself,
but one which left Western European languages with written versions,
using letters created by the Romans. Eastern European languages
developed written versions centuries later.
Literate people
obviously have many advantages over people who are illiterate. Even
after Eastern European languages became literate, it was a long
time before they had such accumulations of valuable written knowledge
as Western European languages had, due to Western European languages'
centuries earlier head start.
Even the educated
elites of Eastern Europe were often educated in Western European
languages. None of this was due to the faults of one or the merits
of the other. It is just the way that history went down.
But such mundane
explanations of gross disparities are seldom emotionally satisfying
– least of all to those on the short end of these disparities. With
the rise over time of an indigenous intelligentsia in Eastern Europe
and the growing influence of mass politics, more emotionally satisfying
explanations emerged, such as oppression, exploitation and the like.
Since human
beings have seldom been saints, whether in Eastern Europe or elsewhere,
there were no doubt many individual flaws and shortcomings among
the non-indigenous elites to complain of. But those shortcomings
were not the fundamental reason for the economic disparities between
Eastern Europeans and Western Europeans. More important, seeing
those Western European elites in Eastern Europe as the cause of
the economic disparities led many Eastern Europeans into the blind
alley of ethnic identity politics, including hostility to Germans,
Jews and others – and a romanticizing of their own cultural patterns
that were holding them back.
What happened
in Eastern Europe, including many tragedies that grew out of the
polarization of groups in the region, has implications that reach
far beyond Europe, and in fact reach all around the world, where
similar events have produced similar polarizations and similar historic
tragedies.
Today, in America,
many denounce the black-white gap in economic and other achievements,
which they attribute to the same kinds of causes as those to which
the lags of Eastern Europeans have been attributed. Moreover, the
persistence of these gaps, years after the civil rights laws were
expected to close them, is regarded as something strange and even
sinister.
Yet
the economic disparities between Eastern Europeans and Western Europeans
remains to this day greater than the economic disparities between
blacks and whites in America – and the gap in Europe has lasted
for centuries.
Focusing attention
and attacks on people who have greater wealth-generating capacity
– whether races, classes or whatever – has had counterproductive
consequences, including tragedies written in the blood of millions.
Whole totalitarian governments have risen to dictatorial power on
the wings of envy and resentment ideologies.
Intellectuals
have all too often promoted these envy and resentment ideologies.
There are both psychic and material rewards for the intelligentsia
in doing so, even when the supposed beneficiaries of these ideologies
end up worse off. When you want to help people, you tell them the
truth. When you want to help yourself, you tell them what they want
to hear.
Both politicians
and intellectuals have made their choice.
January
17, 2012
Thomas
Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.
To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
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