Conversations with Tyler - Claudia Goldin on the Economics of Inequality

Episode Date: October 6, 2021

Harvard professor Claudia Goldin has made a name for herself tackling difficult questions. What was the full economic cost of the American Civil War? Does education increase or lessen income inequalit...y? What causes the gender pay gap—and how do you even measure it? Her approach, which often involves the unearthing of new historical data, has yielded lasting insights in several distinct areas of economics. Claudia joined Tyler to discuss the rise of female billionaires in China, why the US gender earnings gap expanded in recent years, what's behind falling marriage rates for those without a college degree, why the wage gap flips for Black women versus Black men, theoretical approaches for modeling intersectionality, gender ratios in economics, why she's skeptical about happiness research, how the New York Times wedding announcement page has evolved, the problems with for-profit education, the value of an Ivy League degree, whether a Coasian solution existed to prevent the Civil War, which Americans were most likely to be anti-immigrant in the 1920s, her forthcoming work on Lanham schools, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded September 1st, 2021 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter  Follow Claudia on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.  Thumbnail photo credit: BBVA Foundation

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Starting point is 00:00:02 Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems. Learn more at Mercadis.org. And for more conversations, including videos, transcripts, and upcoming dates, visit Conversationswithtyler.com. Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler. Today I'm chatting with Claudia Golden, who is quite simply one of the leading economists. She is professor of economics at Harvard University, has made major contributions to economic history, the theory of income inequality, economics of education, gender economics, and much more.
Starting point is 00:00:46 Most exciting of all, she has a new and excellent book out called Career and Family, Women's Century Long Journey Toward Equity. Claudia, welcome. I'm very, very pleased to be here, Tyler. Let me ask a question I've been wondering about, why does China right now have so many of the world, self-made female billionaires? I don't know. I wouldn't mind being one. But it's a big change in the payment of women, right? And it's happened in one place. It hasn't happened in America. You know, as you well know, it's a very large country. But let's face it,
Starting point is 00:01:22 Chinese women became more liberated during the communist revolution. I mean, anyone who went to China during the period after the revolution saw that women, women really did work alongside men. There is no question that equality has escaped China as it has escaped much of the world. I was there in 1975, which is a very long story. I met many different people who are in some middle ranks, upper middle ranks of the party. And there were a lot of women. And let's face it, there weren't a lot of women in 1975 in Congress. and certainly not in the White House. But if we look at a CCP meeting today, a photo, it just seems to be all men, right?
Starting point is 00:02:12 There's no Nancy Pelosi in there. At the middle level, women don't seem to earn that well in China, but somehow at the very top, there's been this big breakthrough. Well, kudos for them. Question about America. As you've shown, from 1995 to 2008 in the U.S., the gender earnings gap actually expanded. Why was that? Well, it didn't expand that much. I mean, we're talking about blips on blips. So it expanded more for the higher educated than for the lower educated, or should I say, it actually closed for the lower educated, whereas it's stagnated for the higher educated. And the latter, a lot of that is due to the enormous expansion of inequality at the top. So women paid a relative price.
Starting point is 00:03:02 for the fact that inequality just zoomed upward. How much of that do you think is due to the growth of super firms? So especially in tech and finance, those seem to be fairly malintensive areas. And if they're earning much more, right at the upper end, that would push up the income gap. I think it's less that than the distribution itself, that men, for lots of different reasons, tend to be in the way right tail. So that's going to be in finance. It's not just in tech. It's going to be in all areas. It's going to be in surgery. It's going to be in dentistry. It's going to be in lots of different self-employment. But it seems scalability should really matter. So I could be the world's best dentist, right? I can't serve that many customers or patients. Thank goodness. I'll learn well. But I won't be the next Mark Zuckerberg, right?
Starting point is 00:03:52 Right, but finance is certainly scalable. And let's face it, surgeons are, you know, when we look at the data that's been put together for the upper, upper end, surgeons tend to be up there too. You've argued in your book and in numerous articles that flexibility of hours is a critical variable for thinking about the earnings gap between men and women. If we look at the literature on firms, we seem to see that fixed costs are rising, intangible capital is rising, lower marginal cost, higher marksups, does that mean that flexible working hours are hard to achieve when fixed costs are high? You would think when fixed costs are high, you want to basically take the people you have and drive them as much as possible, which in fact you see in finance and in tech. Right. So should we be pessimistic about gender pay equity moving forward? So the fixed costs here can also be coming from certain labor. So you're saying that from training,
Starting point is 00:04:49 but you're saying that the fixed costs are all that capital, capital per labor has increased. Or it's branding, right? Facebook, Google are very famous companies. They've achieved a certain position. Right. At the margin, they want to work the people they hire fairly hard. Yeah, but it doesn't seem that difficult to create a small amount of redundancy to have good substitutes.
Starting point is 00:05:12 So all of these firms have professionals. Think about consulting firms, accounting firms, banks, financial corporations, lawyers, all of them have individuals who are, you know, quite special, quite unique. And yet, I don't think it takes that much to create a small amount of redundancy so you can have people hand things off. That doesn't mean that you're creating cadres of individuals who are lookalikes and who are sort of driving down their own price. But flexibility isn't that difficult to achieve.
Starting point is 00:05:51 for the individuals who are at that upper end whose earnings you were going to have to increase even more if they put their foot down and say, I am not working during my vacation. You're going to have to increase their earnings even more. I don't think it's that heavy a lift. As skill levels rise, doesn't it get harder to hand things off rather than easier? So in a pharmacy, there's skill required, but it's not extreme. Well, that's what you think. to substitute in another economist for an hour of your time, that's very hard to do.
Starting point is 00:06:26 I don't think so. I know one. I live with one who I use as my co-author. Yes. First of all, I don't think it's in the training as much as it is in, and I think most people in the business would agree with me, that, yes, there's a lot of training for many different fields, accountants, lawyers, consultants. But most of the problem, most of the problem that they would claim there is, is in the handing off of information, in the passing off of information with high levels of fidelity and with trust. I think that one of the things that the Zoom world has done is it's led me to trust you, even though I can't touch you. Do you think there are scenarios where marriage makes a meaningful comeback for lower socioeconomic economic groups and what might those scenarios look like?
Starting point is 00:07:23 Well, as someone who got married five years ago, after living with someone for 26 years, I would have to sort of get out of my own life into someone else's. But I think that for many people, marriage creates more stability, either because they've made a commitment to themselves or those around them see them as more committed. And I think the main, a main benefit is to children so that children have more stability. Sure, but for people without a college degree, marriage rates have fallen dramatically in the United States and rise in single parent families. Can you see economic forces that might reverse that, or is that just going to keep on going? I don't know if it's going to keep on going. There was a really great piece in the Times the other day about mainly women with less than a college student.
Starting point is 00:08:18 degree who said, I don't want to get married or have kids right now. I want a career. I want to be financially independent. I don't know whether that means that they are eschewing marriage altogether and that, in fact, we have a new group of women who, even though they don't have higher degrees, are wonderfully financially independent and can raise children in good environment. obviously the big issue, and this is the one I think in back of this question, is what's happening to the men. And if we can lift the economic opportunities of men who don't have college degrees, then some of the problem, I think, will be solved.
Starting point is 00:09:08 That's a big problem. How do men and women respond differently to narrow financial incentives in the workplace? Or is it just the same? to narrow meaning. You give people bonuses, do they work harder, would be one of many questions. Do men and women respond the same to that or differently? I really don't know. It's a very, very good question. Did they respond in terms of working harder? That's a good question to ask some consultant. I think my answer would be that they both would respond the same, but that women have greater constraints who are parents. So I can be in a law firm and have phenomenal incentives.
Starting point is 00:09:51 I can be an accounting firm with phenomenal incentives. We know what those types of bonuses look like. But if a parent says, I cannot work Thursday mornings and therefore gives up that benefit, that isn't because she's a bad worker and she's not responding to the benefit. It's that her needs are inconsistent with the firm's demands. My intuition would be that whether women work at all depends more on incentives, but how much they work at the margin, if they work, depends less on incentives. That's a good point. But of course, that initial margin is the big margin, the one that gets you into the workplace. And so then you have the issue of selectivity. So the women who are in the workplace and in certain types of workplaces are going to be selected either on the basis of personal character.
Starting point is 00:10:45 or the characteristics of their spouses. Why does the wage gap flip for black women versus black men? These are great questions. These remind me of, you know, questions that you might get in some generals exam. Why does the wage gap flip? The black male wage gap is a very difficult statistic because it's a highly selected statistics. So as we know from lots of very good work, if we take the population, the entire population, we'll get one number.
Starting point is 00:11:23 If we take the population that's not incarcerated, we'll get another number. If we take the population that's never been incarcerated, we'll get another number. So I think that deep in that calculation are some of the nation's largest ills. When I read non-economists on wage gaps, I see the word intersection acts. very often, the notion that there's some nonlinear effect created by combining different types of discrimination. What is your take on intersectionality and does it play a role in your argument? I would like to take a small course on intersectionality because I'm not certain if I model this as a theorist where the sections are going to be and how I figure out how many sections I want.
Starting point is 00:12:12 someone has a gender at birth. They have a decided gender, perhaps. They have a race. They have where they grew up. They have a religion. They have their education of their parents. And many of these co-vary, they're correlated. In fact, this would be a great PhD thesis. And for all I know, someone would tell me, sure, when Rosen wrote it 40 years ago or something, or maybe Eddie Lazier, I don't know, quite frankly, what to do with intersectionality. What do you think of this as a simple model? So we all know the standard economic model. There can be too many tolls on the medieval river, right?
Starting point is 00:12:52 It's double marginalization. That can be a non-linear impact. Too many tolls, the river is just unusable. There's negative externalities, one predator on another. So think of discrimination as a kind of tax, right, which it is. And then you have multiple taxes from different directions, and they interact like the tolls on the river. and maybe intersectionality makes a lot of sense, no?
Starting point is 00:13:12 Yes, I think that that's a very, very good way of thinking about it. Thank you for giving me a little bit of theory to hang my head on. But the problem is whether these are multiplicative, whether they're less than that, there really is some issue having to do with functional form. And I don't know whether they are separable. I mean, the way in which you said it, they would be separable. I don't know. It's both a very interesting. Thank you for the idea. I will pass it on to one of my really good graduate students to model and then test. That's a very, very good point.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Another question. Another PhD dissertation coming from Tyler. That's what we should call this. PhD dissertations coming from Tyler. When I speak with high-achieving women, I know, they tell me something frequently, more or less the same, that there's a fear of sexual harassment, and this leaves women to choose more careers where they don't put themselves out there so much, and as a result, we'll earn less, or quite likely they'll be less famous, suffer other penalties, and that this is a major factor in career choice and earnings. What's your take on that? Well, I think it can be. I in no way, shape, or form want to minimize that, And my sense is that gender differences and earnings are not in the majority due to factors like that.
Starting point is 00:14:40 However, those factors we really want to root out. You know, there's obviously a difference between dating and romance and sexual predators and sexual harassment. The fact that we have so many front page cases about sexual harassment, both heterosexual and homosexual sexual harassment shows that it exists and it should be rooted out. How much it is affecting the choices that women make and men make, I think is not that gigantic. If we're trying to explain gender pay gaps or inequities, and we think there's at least two factors. One is for a given job, women might be paid less, right? Yeah. Another factor is that women may end up in jobs or in majors or with interests that pay less in the longer run.
Starting point is 00:15:31 How do you assess the relative proportion of those two factors? We do all sorts of calculations to try to figure out, you know, what's happening within versus between. Of course, one of the problems that we always face is the issue of aggregation. You know, so the more you disaggregate occupations or firm occupation, the more you're going to sort of minimize the problems that are happening within. So my sense from the work that I've done, that the issue of occupational segregation, for example, has been vastly reduced over time. What's happening within occupations, the real challenge there is to understand whether
Starting point is 00:16:21 individuals are being paid less for absolutely equivalent work within the same firm. And that is the standard federal guideline that one is looking for. That's the smoking gun or whether individuals are getting paid less, for example, because they're working at the boutique law firm where they have amenities that they want or whether they're working at the Madison Avenue, Park Avenue law firm, where they have fewer flexible amenities. I think that those are the challenges and the data. challenges that we all have. Now, as you may know, there's a debate in experimental economics
Starting point is 00:17:03 and also field experimental economics as to whether women are more averse to competition than men. One doesn't have to think this is intrinsic. It could itself be the result of discrimination. But what's your view there? So, you know, I know all the experiments. They're done by extraordinary scholars. I myself have no idea how to do experimental economics because you could do just about anything and you just have to be incredibly clever at designing these experiments. And I know that there's lots of evidence that women take fewer risks. They are less pushy. They are more insecure, or at least we think that they are more insecure. You know, there's very, very interesting experiments on stockbrokers. Of course, there's the flip side that individuals who are
Starting point is 00:17:57 highly risk-taking often lose a lot. So I think that more and more as women are educated at lower levels to realize that they can be anything that they want to be. If we look at younger women versus older women, I think that we do see that women are more competitive now than they certainly were when I was a kid. You know, it's interesting that there's the great book, Women Don't Ask by Linda Babcock and Leshiver. And I remember when that first came out and I said, how can you say women don't ask, go to any department store and see who's standing there screaming about the fact that the toaster doesn't work?
Starting point is 00:18:43 As you know, if we look at undergraduate majors, the ratio, it's like three to one men to women, right? It's not obvious that is budging. If we look at faculty, I read one estimate that the ratio for women hasn't really improved since the 1990s. The ratio, you're saying in economics or in one? The gender ratio. I'm not sure what level they were counting, you know, or adjuncts included, but it wasn't obvious. You're saying three to one for a particular major? For economics majors.
Starting point is 00:19:12 Oh, okay. I believe the ratio is three to one and not really budging. Well, it did, but I put those numbers together. Okay. How is it evolving? So was more like four to one than three to one now about two to one. So it has increased by quite a lot. One of the problems that we have as a field is that when students, before they even come into their freshman year and they're asked, what do they want to major in? Women, if they want to major in the social sciences, will put down psychology and men will put down economics. So we lose them before they even unpack their suitcases.
Starting point is 00:19:56 So I ran an RCT called Undergraduate Women in Economics Challenge. And we had 20 universities and colleges, liberal arts colleges, begin a program for freshmen to explain to them that economics is not just about the things that their parents have told them about, which, they find boring, which don't involve people. But economics is a very people-oriented subject. It involves quality. It involves children. It involves obesity. It involves health.
Starting point is 00:20:34 It involves everything. And we move the needle a bit. I mean, we're still trying to figure out exactly how much we move the needle. But the problem is that we do very, very poorly in our PR, ourselves. So if you read the textbooks and they are changing and there are a number of recent textbooks that understood these problems, that economics is X and Y, it's agents. And most young people don't want to deal with agents. They want to deal with humans. And particularly, it seems as if women more than men would like to deal with humans. And so women,
Starting point is 00:21:19 will tend to go into this field called psychology or sociology, which indicates in their writings that it's about people. We indicate in their writings that it is about agents or Greek letters. And so we just have to do a lot better. How is the gender ratio for tenured economics professors evolving? I mean, C-Swap, that is the American Economic Association Committee, on the status of women in the economics profession puts together those data and they are creeping upward as one would think they would. Now, in some very interesting work, we can see that they are, I said, the word creeping up, you know, they're not bounding up. And the reason that they're not bounding up,
Starting point is 00:22:10 at first we thought was a pipeline issue. But now it's pretty clear that it's less that the pipeline issue while it was there and still is there, that there's also an issue with the fact that women did more than men will leave academia and use their economic skills extremely well, but outside the tenure track. Should we either abolish tenure or fundamentally change it so as not to penalize women, but also for other reasons, right? It seems grossly unfair. Yeah, I certainly wouldn't do it because it's a penalty for one group or another. I mean, it is an issue that arose. It's solved potentially an issue from some time ago. I don't know if the fundamentals are the same that would support it. It is clearly a difficult problem in the sense that individuals have
Starting point is 00:23:09 higher productivity when they're young and then lower productivity. And so I think that having long-term contracts is useful for individuals in fields where they're, you know, so we think about sports. Clearly, those people just clean up at the beginning. Then they become used car salesmen or whatever they become. So the question is, you know, do we have another completely changed academic environment in which the superstars clean up at some point? And then they go into something else. I don't think that that would work either. I think that a very important thing to think about is that we produce a large number of products. You know, we produce knowledge. And that's really the hardest thing to figure out how to do. But we produce the dissemination of knowledge and teaching.
Starting point is 00:24:03 And people who are older probably do that better. And that is not generally what tenure is given for. I'm sure you know the Stevenson in Wolfer's paper 2009. Why haven't American women gained more in happiness? I'm not that great fan of that. I remember Betsy was interviewed on Mother's Day one year, and she was a new mother. And the person interviewing her said, your work shows that mothers are less happy than they had been before they became mothers. And the person said, that was a great question for Mother's Day. And Bessie was stuck. And Bessie said, well, yes, but they would never give up their baby. For me, as an economist, that says it all, there's some problem.
Starting point is 00:24:56 You think it's not true that American women are less happy than they had been. I'm not sure what your stance is. My stance is that I'm not happy with the happiness measures. You think through something else they're not picking up. Yeah. And that's a kind of ordinal choice thing rather than like stress in the moment. Yeah. And that if people are choosing something out of a greater set of opportunities, they probably are happier.
Starting point is 00:25:18 That's right. It's very hard to do that sort of in general. Sometimes we rile up a group and get them to remember the things that they're less happy about. And sometimes we show them where their lives are safe and secure and wonderful and plentiful. and then they get happier. So I remember when Dick Easteland first began the happiness literature. I remember very, very well. It was a very long time ago having dinner with him in Madison, Wisconsin and talking about it.
Starting point is 00:25:54 And I was enthralled with trying to understand this happiness literature. And that was across countries. It seemed sort of interesting from my Chicago theory point of view that people, re-center their happiness. So you can be in a place in which if you were plunk down there from somewhere else, you'd be miserable. And yet you're there and you recalibrate yourself, just like people recalibrate themselves when they have a bad health event. It takes a while. So I'm not certain what to do with the happiness literature. What best correlates with women keeping their maiden name after marriage? You've
Starting point is 00:26:39 written on this? Right. So for the period in which it increased enormously, which was in the early 70s, there were several things that were important. The first one was that they were given an appellation. So rather than being called miss or misses, they could be called miss. And that just meant that more and more women could do it. But more importantly, and this gets to the title of the article that I wrote with one of my undergraduates, it was that they've already made a name. So if you publish or you're a lawyer or a doctor or a yoga instructor or a hairdresser and you are known as, you know, Tallulah Bankhead, the big a great name, it's going to be hard to change it. It became your identity.
Starting point is 00:27:32 It became your calling card. So then the question is, well, okay, fine. keep your name. But then there were some barriers to that. And the barriers then began to be taken down. There were barriers, institutional barriers. There were legal barriers in terms of having to change your name with social security system on your passport, on your driver's license. There were retrograde states that weren't letting women who got married not changed their names. I remember I was at Princeton at the time, and I was married to a Princeton professor. I was no longer a professor of Princeton. And the library insisted that I used his name on my card, despite the fact that I had
Starting point is 00:28:18 been an assistant professor there with my name. That was one of the greatest affronts. Okay. But all of that disappeared. And so that became, once again, a great enabler. And then finally, it's what to do when you're kids are in school and you have a different name. It's very easy when the plumber comes to the door to tell the plumber, I am not Mrs. Katz, but it would be much harder. It's often hard still, unfortunately, to pick your kid up at school when you have a different last name than they. Why is the title Ms. more or less disappeared from the scene? I don't think it has. Where has it? I heard it a great deal in the 1980s. It feels today that I hardly ever hear it. I also hear Mr. less often, to be clear, but Ms. seems to have vanished. viewed as almost
Starting point is 00:29:09 condescending. I don't know. I'm asking. I genuinely don't know. Tyler, what are you here? People avoiding the designation altogether. Okay. But on forms, forms, the list of potential appellations will always include Ms. Yes. I think that one reason that it may disappear, and I think that it's nice if we actually get to know our first names, particularly in communities, there may be a sense that you don't want to use any indication of gender, that gender has become a no-no, that we have a mona committee now. We're used to a national committee in which we're very used to talking about two genders. And now, so we have two genders, ex-regers.
Starting point is 00:29:59 X races, Y ethnicities, you multiply them together and you get the number of cells. And now we're into more genders. So I think that may be one of the reasons. How much do you think the trans movement will in fact disrupt feminism by breaking down the two traditional categories, men, women? So if someone wants to say, well, the ratio of men to women in this area is that, trans movement could say, well, we can't quite presume that, right, and blur the entire comparison. Is that going to matter moving forward or is that temporary? I don't know. I don't think any of this is temporary.
Starting point is 00:30:34 If anything, I would applaud the fact that we are sort of smoothing over gender and moving. I would think that in the greatest scheme of things, that is a move towards greater equality in the sense that individuals, that there is fluidity in who they are. and I sort of applaud it. I'm not quite certain what to do with it, but I applaud it. When you read the New York Times wedding announcement page, like what honestly do you think? So I tend to think, like two things.
Starting point is 00:31:07 Like, my goodness, these elites are remarkably creative and self-replicating. And then it strikes me how much people who are not religious at critical points in their lives actually want to invoke religion for the ceremony. But then it's often just discarded again. Like, that's what I actually think when I read that page. but what do you actually think? The first thing is that I've been reading that page for a very, very long time. And for those viewers who don't know, when I did the piece on name changes,
Starting point is 00:31:36 one of the data sets that we used was the New York Times style section, now called Vows, would list whether the bride was or was not changing her name. So we used that as a data set. But to be perfectly frank, the New York Times in their own mysterious ways, has changed that page to be very non, I shouldn't say very, but relative to what it was, non-elite. Single-sex education for women underrated or overrated? What do you think of it? I have a personal stance that it's highly overrated, but I wouldn't want to get into an argument
Starting point is 00:32:17 with my friend, colleague, person I have enormous admiration for Ames. Me Finkelstein, who believes thoroughly in it. When I was a kid growing up in the Bronx, I couldn't imagine a world that I wanted to be in that didn't have boys. At the time, girls were, I think, far less assertive, far less serious. I had girlfriends, but I enjoyed being around the boys a lot more. I went to Bronx Science, which was about two-thirds boys when I applied to college, I just could not imagine going to an all-girls school. Now, I know the arguments in reverse. I respect them, but it was certainly not for me. Why does for-profit education seem to fail so badly? Like some parts of the learning sector are for-profit. Your books are put out by for-profit publishers,
Starting point is 00:33:11 textbooks are. Berlitt seems to do okay relative to language classes at your local state college, but for-profit education as a whole seems to implode. Like, what's the model there? I think that it's some for-profit education. It's certainly not all for-profit education, but I think the problem is that the part of for-profit education that sort of expanded the greatest was for BAs, and particularly in fields like business administration management, and they became more B.A. Mills. When I was studying for-profit education, I really wanted to, to be able to look at the materials that were given to people. What were they studying?
Starting point is 00:34:00 And I was never able to break into that. The problem is it's twofold. One is that there's a huge profit incentive for the company. That's, of course, not always a problem, as we know. But the other one is for the individuals are not as aware as they should be. of what they're getting themselves into. So they are often very needy. They're low income, their first generation college. Someone is dangling in front of them, something that they really want. They desperately want something that's going to get them out of the hole that life has put them in.
Starting point is 00:34:43 And that person who's dangling it is not giving them sufficient information and sufficient amount of time to get out of this contract. I think we saw that very, very clearly in the GAO audit studies of the for-profits. I think that that's the problem. The for-profits that give short courses that give one-year certification in, let's say, medical technicians, those what we've shown in our work are not the big problem. The big problem is what I just said. And let me just say that I have taken short for-profit courses. on dog training and they work really well.
Starting point is 00:35:25 For nonprofits, I've seen estimates that maybe no more than 40% of the people who try finish. Does that just mean we have too many people trying to attend college? Isn't the true rate of return on education actually pretty low, at the median at least? Well, let me just back up and say that when we were just talking about for-profit education, that the non-for-profit, the non-selective portion could use a business. bit of change as well. I mean, it's not as if they're charging as high an amount or as recruiting using techniques that are as extreme and exploitative as the for-profits, but they also may not really wake up individuals and tell them exactly what they have to do and how much time they
Starting point is 00:36:17 need to spend. So I think that we do know, Tyler, there's incredibly good, really superb research on that marginal student and that the marginal student, you know, this is Seth Zimmerman's phenomenal work. The marginal student does gain a tremendous amount by getting into a good college. But is that true for the marginal student on the side? of the margin where they don't finish. Your own work with Katz suggests there's this discontinuity some people who simply can't leap the hurdle into having a college degree. It's somehow too hard for them temperamentally. Possibly. I'm trying to go back. We have to go back to Seth's work to know the point of identification. I thought the point of identification was the individual who was
Starting point is 00:37:13 graduating from high school. So he's in fact, including in that the probabilities that they don't finish, okay, and the rate of return for that person who was able to go to this Florida International was incredibly high. If you look at a school, you know, say like Duke or Emery, is it a long-run problem that if they admit people on their merits that there'll be too many women in the school relative to men and some kind of affirmative action will be needed for the males? These are private institutions and they can generally accept whom they would like to accept for various reasons of diversity. Should they do that or should they just take in 76% women, say? I'm brought back to the original issues that were raised by a small number of liberal
Starting point is 00:38:10 colleges and universities in the 50s and the 60s about why they should become co-educational institutions. And those reasons were that their marginal student was leaving, was not going to Princeton, but going to Harvard, not going to Princeton, but going to Penn, not going to Princeton, but going to Cornell, because that student wanted an education that was, more balanced in terms of what the world would look like when they got out. And that more balanced then was not necessarily blacks, Hispanics, Jews, but the one major thing that was missing from Princeton and Yale and Dartmouth and Amherst and Wesleyan and a whole bunch of places was women. And so those institutions in a process that I've described,
Starting point is 00:39:10 on the origins of co-education led these institutions to move in the direction of accepting more women. Now, what's going through your mind, I think, is yes, but they weren't lowering quality. In fact, they were increasing quality. But diversity in any dimension can be thought of as a plus for everyone. So it was about 10 years ago that some dean in a small liberal or College in the Midwest, admitted to the fact that they were accepting men with lower SAT Act and grade point averages to increase diversity. But, you know, men probably are not less intelligent than women on average, right? So what's the pipeline problem?
Starting point is 00:40:00 Is it too much homework and too many extracurriculars in high school or something else? Where are we failing our young boys? We can go back as early as we have data. as early as we have data on high schools and know that girls attended high schools, graduated from high schools, at far for greater numbers than boys. So if there is an issue here, it's certainly not extracurriculous, it may have to do with what's going on in your cells and this difference between this Y and this double X. The value of an Ivy League degree, what percentage of that value do you think comes from signaling as opposed to learning?
Starting point is 00:40:43 Very little. I think that it's not signaling. It's probably networks. Networks. So it's something you get from having, why is there a sheepskin effect then, which is quite strong? Because you could meet people there for three years
Starting point is 00:40:55 and then just not finish. I don't know what the numbers are for the sheepskin effects. I'm always very dubious on anything having to do with real signaling. But in terms of sheepskin effects, I'm willing to read up on it. but I don't know what it is. The networks are enormously important. You know, sometimes I look at my undergraduates and I think I would just be such a better
Starting point is 00:41:20 person if I could live with these people. These are the most accomplished people. And so you would be able to listen to someone playing the cello. You would be listening to someone teaching you about Verdi operas. They're just an incredible group of individuals. So in some sense, not the same networking that Teddy Roosevelt would have been able to do or John Kennedy. It's instead an ability to grasp just an enormous amount in a mere four years. I went to Cornell, which of course is an Ivy League school too.
Starting point is 00:41:59 And I had a phenomenal experience, but nothing like I would have if I went to Harvard right now. That's why I want to go back to college. You're there now, right? I know, but I'm on the giving end, not the receiving end. The literature on returns to skill. So there's a piece by Bodry, empirical work by Rob Valletta, which argues post-2000 or so that the returns to skill are in general collapsing. Do you view that as stepping outside of your model with cats in your book,
Starting point is 00:42:30 race between education and technology, or do you dispute the result? How do you see that? Yeah, I would have to go back over that the returns to, which skills. Most skills, they suspect it may be due to automation, artificial intelligence. Yeah, well, I read the work of David Deming in which we now, the set of skills that are in enormously great demand are a set of social skills. And the question is, how do you up social skills? that it seems as if we know a lot about the demand for social skills. We know a lot less about the supply of social skills.
Starting point is 00:43:10 So it may be that when we think about the skill of the past, we're thinking about first, you know, manual skills, then motor skills, then mental skills. And now we're moving into the range of social skills. Our last segment on economic history. Why wasn't there a co-cean solution to the Civil War? war, namely just buying out the slaveholders. This is going back to your work from what, 1977? Well, I mean, Lincoln wrestled with that. When thinks about what went on in the White House
Starting point is 00:43:44 during the Civil War, I mean, one just thinks about Lincoln just wrestling, physically wrestling with all of these difficult issues. And in fact, the slaves were purchased in the District of Columbia. So he was doing calculations about how we could pay slave owners for their property. You know, for the longest time that one of the central issues in Lincoln's mind was that property was extremely important to protect and slaves were property. And so we would have to buy out the slaves. And he made lots of different calculations. And of course, course, there were many different emancipation programs that preceded that. In fact, you may know that the North had slaves. New York did. New Jersey did. And by acts of the legislature, slaves were freed
Starting point is 00:44:44 as of a certain age. And so that was what was called gradual emancipation. It wasn't very good emancipation. And it couldn't have had some horrific effects. And in fact, one of the effects was that slaves were shipped. from these northern areas to the south. So there were lots of different potential programs. And, I mean, one of the things that Frank Lewis and I did when we computed the cost of the Civil War was we were essentially telling Lincoln, oops, you know, you should have done it. What best predicted anti-immigration sentiment in the 1920s? What probably best predicted it was it was sort of a combination. It appeared, from some ancient work I've done of areas that got immigrants and reduced the opportunities for others in the area and for whom the immigrant groups that were there already were not the
Starting point is 00:45:46 ones who were flooding in. So one could think of the various parts of the country. Ironically, the South was really pro-immigrant for the longest time because it's viewed these immigrants as a wonderful substitute for a labor force that was migrating north and had for decades not been slave. And so the South was pro-immigrant and they became anti-immigrant only when they realized that immigrants weren't going there. And when they were going there, they were Italians and they were dark and these were, you know, pretty racist people. In the north, the places that began to shift being anti-immigrant. And I was looking more at the shifts of voting for legislation that would put in place rules for literacy.
Starting point is 00:46:43 Those places were places that did not have large numbers of people from Eastern, Central, and Southern Europe. And so the people there, in slamming the door, were not slamming the door in the face of their relatives. And very last question. Your book is coming out. Again, that book is Career and Family, Women's Century Long Journey Toward Equity by Claudia Golden. But other than promoting your book, what will you be doing next? Oh, wonderful. So I'm working on a couple of projects. One is, this is a lot of fun. So there was something called Lanham Act that was passed in 1940 that was for infrastructure for America, lots of money. And by 1942, 43, it was pretty clear that America needed to, in fighting this war at home, in producing goods for the allies that we needed to have women employed. And so the Lanham Act funds
Starting point is 00:47:44 were repurposed for nursery schools and after school programs. And what we're doing with Joe Ferry and Claudia Olivetti is finding out exactly where these Lanham schools were. And through the amazing ability that exists now, we can figure out whether individuals who were three to six years old during some period had some high probability of going to a Lanham school, what happened to them 50 years later. So that's one of the things I'm doing. I mean, another thing is trying to figure out why men who are fathers do so well relative to women who are mothers.
Starting point is 00:48:29 And that's another piece of the puzzle. Claudia Golden, thank you very much. It was a real pleasure to meet you almost in person, Tyler. Same here. Till next time. Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the podcast in iTunes, Stitcher, or your favorite. favorite podcast app. And if you like this podcast,
Starting point is 00:48:54 please consider rating it on iTunes and leaving a review. This helps other people find the show.

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