Freakonomics Radio - 480. How Much Does Discrimination Hurt the Economy? (Replay)
Episode Date: November 9, 2023Evidence from Nazi Germany and 1940’s America (and pretty much everywhere else) shows that discrimination is incredibly costly — to the victims, of course, but also the perpetrators. One modern so...lution is to invoke a diversity mandate. But new research shows that’s not necessarily the answer. RESOURCES:"Discrimination, Managers, and Firm Performance: Evidence from 'Aryanizations' in Nazi Germany," by Kilian Huber, Volker Lindenthal, and Fabian Waldinger (Journal of Political Economy, 2021)."Diversity and Performance in Entrepreneurial Teams," by Sophie Calder-Wang, Paul A. Gompers, and Kevin Huang (SSRN, 2021)."Systemic Discrimination Among Large U.S. Employers," by Patrick M. Kline, Evan K. Rose, and Christopher R. Walters (NBER Working Papers, 2021).City of Champions: A History of Triumph and Defeat in Detroit, by Silke-Maria Weineck and Stefan Szymanski (2020)."The Allocation of Talent and U.S. Economic Growth," by Chang-Tai Hsieh, Erik Hurst, Charles I. Jones, and Peter J. Klenow (Econometrica, 2019).Genius & Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847-1947, by Norman Lebrecht (2019)."And the Children Shall Lead: Gender Diversity and Performance in Venture Capital," by Paul A. Gompers and Sophie Q. Wang (NBER Working Papers, 2017)."The Political Economy of Hatred," by Edward Glaeser (The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2005)."Statistical Theories of Discrimination in Labor Markets," by Dennis J. Aigner and Glen G. Cain (Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1977).The Economics of Discrimination, by Gary S. Becker (1957).EXTRAS:"A New Nobel Laureate Explains the Gender Pay Gap (Replay)," by Freakonomics Radio (2023)."Edward Glaeser Explains Why Some Cities Thrive While Others Fade Away," by People I (Mostly) Admire (2021)."What Are the Secrets of the German Economy — and Should We Steal Them?" by Freakonomics Radio (2017).SOURCES:Kilian Huber, professor of economics at the University of Chicago.Silke-Maria Weineck, professor of German studies and comparative literature at the University of Michigan.Sophie Calder-Wang, professor of economics at the University of Pennsylvania.
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There is a saying I've heard in many forms in many places over the years.
Maya Angelou used to say, when someone shows you who they are, believe them.
There's another version that goes like this.
If there is a crowd in the street shouting that they want to kill you, you should take them seriously.
There are parts of the world where
crowds gather to shout death to the Jews. We should believe them. The latest evidence,
on October 7th, thousands of Hamas fighters, having been trained in Iran, financed by Hamas
leadership in Qatar and positioned in Gaza, crossed the Israeli border and killed some 1,400
Jews with a level of barbarism that hardly seems believable in the 21st century. The details are
too grotesque to keep repeating. One Hamas attacker phoned his mother from the site.
Your son killed Jews, he said. Mom, your son is a hero. They also kidnapped Jews,
more than 200, and took them back to Gaza. They had apparently been promised a bounty of $10,000
and an apartment for each Jew they kidnapped. Since that day, every Israeli, every Jew in the world has been forced into grief and at the same time forced to reckon with an ancient reality.
Anti-Semitism is one of the oldest and most lasting hatreds in the world.
It is far from the only hatred of its kind.
The economist Ed Glazer once wrote a paper called The Political Economy
of Hatred. He was trying to understand, as he put it, anti-Black hatred in the U.S. South,
anti-Semitism in Europe, and anti-Americanism in the Arab world. Where does all this hatred come
from? Not, Glazer argues, from any actual familiarity or interaction with the target
of the hatred. He writes, anti-Semitism, anti-Black hatred, and anti-Americanism have
all been fostered by false stories manufactured and spread by entrepreneurs of hate. These are
usually political operatives hoping to gain or hold on to power.
For millennia, political leaders have proven that scapegoating an outgroup is a good way to consolidate your power and to shift attention from how you treat your own people.
Glazer compares these entrepreneurs of hate to the cigarette manufacturers who used to pretend that smoking is good for us. How does one
reason with the hatred generated by such entrepreneurs? The sad fact is that reason
is a weak instrument when it comes to changing minds generally, and all the more so once someone
has been persuaded to hate. Hatred is not only ugly, it is durable.
And it's costly.
It costs all of us,
not just the ones left to grieve directly.
That is the theme behind the episode you are about to hear.
We first published it just over two years ago.
It has unfortunately become much more timely.
There is something I usually say at the end of every show, but today
I'm going to say it now. Take care of yourself, and if you can, someone else too.
Hi, this is Killian. Nice to meet you.
Killian Huber is an economics professor at the University of Chicago. His specialty?
I study how shocks to individual firms and individual households affect the economy more broadly.
He recently published a paper, along with two co-authors,
that tries to answer a pair of important questions.
The first question is, what are the effects of discrimination on the economy more broadly?
This question is even more pressing in the midst of a on the economy more broadly?
This question is even more pressing in the midst of a global reckoning around discrimination.
And the second question?
The second question is what types of individuals are most important in the economy?
So what if you lose highly qualified, highly skilled top executives, top managers?
How does that affect the economy?
You might think Huber was asking these questions in the context of the so-called great resignation.
That's the trend driven by the COVID-19 pandemic of people quitting their jobs to find something more meaningful.
But no, that is not the context Huber was thinking about. He was thinking about discrimination in the 1930s in Germany. Discrimination against Jewish business executives.
Jews were generally very well integrated into the top levels of the German economic system.
They ran all types of firms, firms that we still know today, you know, BMW, Daimler-Benz,
Allianz. These are all firms that had important Jewish executives. Deutsche Bank, still the largest bank today,
had a Jewish CEO called Oskar Wassermann. But in 1933, the Nazis came to power.
The Nazi ideology was extremely perverse. One element of that perversion was a complete
and ultimately violent discrimination against Jews. Once the Nazis came to power in early 1933, firms started dismissing
their Jewish managers relatively quickly. By mid to late 1933, around a third of the Jewish
managers had already left their firms. By 1938, virtually no Jewish individuals remained in the
German economy. Just how central had Jews been to the German economy?
So the Jewish population share in 1930s Germany
before the Nazis came to power was just under 1%,
around 0.8%.
But Jewish individuals held around 15%
of senior management positions in 1932.
So way larger than their population share.
In Berlin, about 5% of the population were Jewish,
but Jews paid over 30% of the taxes in the city. The story of Jewish accomplishment in early 1930s
Germany could have been told one way, as an astonishing triumph of a tiny minority. But
Adolf Hitler turned it into a thoroughly different story,
one of the most grotesque manifestations of human hatred. Many of those Jewish business
executives and their families would be murdered in German concentration camps,
part of a Nazi genocide that would total at least 6 million Jews. Given the enormity of
the Holocaust, you might think that a researcher like Killian Huber
would study something more noteworthy than how the removal of these Jewish executives affected
the German economy. But that's exactly what he was interested in, for two reasons. One is that
Huber grew up in Germany. I actually left Germany when I was 13. I moved to India and then to England.
The second reason is simply that Huber studies the economics of discrimination.
And while the Nazi purge of Jewish business executives may be a particularly heightened
example, it is hardly the only example.
In Uganda in the 1970s, Asians made up less than 1% of the population, but they owned 90% of businesses.
That's 9-0% of businesses, and they paid 90% of tax revenue.
In 1972, all of them were expelled by Idi Amin, the dictator at the time.
There are plenty of even more recent examples.
So in Turkey, for example, several thousand top managers who follow the cleric Fethullah Gülen were expelled, had to leave the country.
In the UK, immigrants were being blamed for economic troubles.
In the US, there was also a movement against certain immigrant groups.
For example, Trump enacted a ban on travel from Muslim-majority countries.
Today on Freakonomics Radio, what did Huber learn about the effects of discrimination
on the German economy?
So this is the amazing thing.
Also, the Jews in Germany, while a tiny minority, were an established presence who were removed
from the economy.
What about when a minority isn't allowed to participate in the economy at all?
The Ford business is a white man's business, and we do not want any Negroes in it.
One way to fight discrimination today is to create diversity policies.
How is that working out?
This paper is not meant to bash any sort of mandated diversity policies,
but just to highlight one potential negative consequence.
The economics of discrimination.
It's even thornier than you'd think.
This is Freakonomics Radio,
the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything, with your host, Stephen Dubner.
Antisemitism is one of the oldest recorded forms of what today we call discrimination, although the phrase anti-Semitism is actually
a misnomer. Semites are people who shared a common language a couple millennia ago,
including Jews and Arabs and many others. So an anti-Semite should theoretically also
discriminate against the more than 400 million Arabs in the world today. Instead, the term is reserved for Jews, of whom there are only
about 15 million. So when we say anti-Semitism, we should really just say anti-Jewish. Anti-Jewish
sentiment has a long and infamous history. Expulsions and exiles, periods of relative
peace and prosperity punctuated by scapegoating and brutal assault.
In the modern era, the scapegoating has often arisen from a simple question. How can this tiny
minority produce such an outsized share of successful individuals in business, science,
and elsewhere? Jews today make up about one-fifth of one percent of the global population,
but account for more than 20 percent of all Nobel Prizes. And remember what Killian Huber told us
about the German economy before the Nazi takeover. Jewish managers held around 15 percent of senior
management positions, so way larger than their population share.
How can this be explained? One factor is that education and literacy have always been central to the Jewish experience. So a lot of research has been devoted to the question of why Jewish
individuals often tend to have higher education levels than others. We don't, I think, have a complete answer to this. Some people
believe that it might be about a culture of reading the Torah, a culture of engaging with
Scripture that might be more important in Judaism than in other cultures.
There's also a propensity toward analytical reasoning, whether derived from religious
tradition or Jewish culture. There is an underlying acknowledgement in Judaism that life is complicated, that the world is in need of repair,
and that the proper way to engage with an idea is, in the words of one ancient Jewish sage,
to turn it and turn it, for everything is in it. In a book called Genius and Anxiety, How Jews Changed the World, 1847 to 1947, the author
Norman Lebrecht puts forth another possible explanation for the high level of Jewish
achievement.
Jews in the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century, he writes, are gripped
by a dread that their rights to citizenship and free speech will be revoked.
Great minds are driven by a need to justify their to citizenship and free speech will be revoked. Great minds are
driven by a need to justify their existence in a hostile environment and to do it quickly before
the next pogrom. Whatever the case, at the beginning of the 20th century in Germany,
there were a great many Jews at the highest levels of industry, academia, the arts, and elsewhere.
Killian Huber, when he began his research, wasn't aware of this.
Yes, I was surprised to learn that Jewish individuals were in so many important positions.
And I was also surprised how quickly large firms turned on them. Hitler came to power at a time of deep political and economic upheaval in Germany.
In the aftermath of Germany's defeat in World War I,
the Allies had imposed heavy reparations. That burden now intersected with a worldwide recession,
sending Germany even further into distress. When Hitler and other angry Germans started
looking around for internal scapegoats, the Jews provided a familiar target.
As long as you had a Jewish grandparent,
as long as you had what they would call Jewish blood, you would have been targeted by the Nazis.
Which quickly led to the removal of even the top executives of the most successful German firms,
if they happened to be Jewish. So this wasn't the Nazi government directly becoming involved,
but this is where the firms preemptively adopting Nazism and anti-Semitism and pushing out these individuals.
So, you know, Oskar Wasserman, he had to leave by June 1933.
Wasserman, remember, was the CEO of Deutsche Bank.
The Nazis came to power in late January 1933.
So there's a huge turnaround in attitudes after the Nazis came to power. And so if you converted to Christianity,
if you're intermarried with Christians, if you really were in no way a religious Jew anymore,
the Nazis would still target you. And these people were all expelled from their positions and often
died horribly in the Holocaust. You write that the Nazi government did not pass any laws that
explicitly forced private firms to dismiss Jewish employees before 1938.
Nonetheless, many Jewish managers lost their positions as early as 1933.
Can you explain that further?
Was it just base anti-Semitism?
Were firms trying to preemptively appease the Nazis?
There was legislation earlier that forced Jews out of the public sector.
And many firms used that legislation as a pretext to dismiss their Jewish employees.
They said, look, clearly the government doesn't want Jewish employees anymore,
so we also don't want them.
We want to be in line with the government ideology.
But there was also a lot of general enthusiasm for the Nazi movement. And it's
perhaps not too surprising if you think of recent extreme political movements, where suddenly it
became okay to say things and think things that perhaps before it wasn't okay to say.
Do you feel, I mean, this is a personal and maybe even rude question, but do you feel that a research project like this for you
was born so far after the fact is still to some degree a penance for having been born German?
I don't think Germans are guilty when they were born after what the Nazis did,
but I think there's a responsibility. And I think part of studying this certainly feels like,
you know, taking on the responsibility of understanding what happened and trying to make sure something like that never, ever happens again, no matter what. sort of natural experiment that allowed Huber and his co-authors, Volker Lindenthal and Fabian
Waldinger, to address a couple issues that economists are always thinking about. First,
what are the effects of discrimination on the economy in general? And second,
how much does a given senior executive actually matter to the success of a firm?
I often use a sports analogy. You can think of, you know, the NBA, Giannis plays for the Bucs.
How important are these individuals to team performance versus they just play for good teams and that's why their teams do well?
That's something we can look at here in the context of business.
If you take away the best manager, how will that affect the performance of the firm?
Is the firm strong enough on its own or does it really need that top human capital?
Perhaps managers don't matter because you can teach any idiot to run a firm. Or do you maybe need to have some natural
ability, some raw talent to start with to get to the very top? To answer these questions,
you would need a lot of data. So this is the amazing thing. There are records that contain
detailed information on every stock listed firm in 1930s Germany.
And by detailed information, I mean we can see the name of every manager on the top level,
including executive board, supervisory board members.
We know their names.
We know a lot about their career history.
And then we can connect those names to information from other sources,
from historians or from original Nazi sources
that identified who would
have been called Jewish by the Nazis at the time. You Germans and your record keeping,
it really comes in handy, doesn't it? Yes, it's somewhat sad to say because
obviously the purpose of this record keeping was, you know, very evil,
but it did help us for scientific purposes later on.
The published paper is called Discrimination, Managers, and Firm Performance, Evidence from
Arianizations in Nazi Germany. So in the paper, we analyze firms that were directly harmed by
discrimination because they lost their Jewish managers. And we show that firms were unable to
replace the top characteristics of dismissed managers. So in
particular, the number of managers with a lot of experience in the firm, the number of managers
with higher education degrees, such as a master's or a PhD, and the number of managers with many
connections to other firms fell significantly when the Jewish managers left the firms.
So the Jewish managers who were expelled had valuable characteristics that were hard to replace.
But how did their expulsion affect the firms?
We find that this ended up affecting
the real performance of these firms.
Share prices of companies that expelled Jewish managers
fell sharply once they dismissed the managers
and stayed low for at least 10 years.
So it's not just the shock of getting rid of the CEO.
That's right. So it's not just a transition effect in the sense that you might struggle
for a year or two while you're trying to find a replacement. Up to 10 years later,
these firms are still doing worse than competitors. So there seems to be a really
persistent effect of losing top managers. We also find that it's not just the
share prices. We find that profits went down. We find that efficiency of the firms went down.
And to give you a number, the share price of the average affected firm declined by about
10 to 12 percent after 1933, which is a huge effect.
You write that German GNP, Gross National Product, fell by 1.8% as a result of this Jewish removal, which, you know,
on the one hand is huge. On the other hand, how relevant was GNP during a war like this?
When the Nazis came to power, the war was still relatively far away. The Nazis came into power
on an economic agenda. People wanted unemployment to go down. They wanted to achieve recovery from the Great Depression
that had plagued the global economy.
And so economic factors were relatively important at the time.
And so our paper, in a sense, goes to show that the Nazis
harmed their economic agenda by expelling some of the best people in the economy.
Do you have any thoughts on what the long-term effects of this Jewish cleansing
were for Germany? Because after the war, Germany rebuilt its economy and its economy has been
generally very robust these last 70, 80 years. There were very few Jews left in the country.
What does that say about either Germany or doing business without a big crop of its senior
leadership? So to me, it suggests that Germany probably would have done even better if it had
not lost that amazing human capital of Jews. The fundamental drivers of economic growth are ideas,
innovation, good people. And these are the ones that clearly weren't quite there to the same
extent anymore. When this kind of racial or ethnic or other cleansing happens, and unfortunately, there
are many examples around the world throughout history, including this century, it still
goes on, it wouldn't seem that the goal is usually an economic one, right?
It's discriminatory or political or religious or whatnot. So,
the perpetrators probably aren't even thinking about the long-term economic consequences.
Should they be? Should your findings perhaps serve as an incentive to rethink this kind of
discrimination? Or is that a ridiculously Pollyannish way of thinking about how the world
works? Well, one way I think about it is that
often these extremist politicians have the reputation of being good for the economy,
that somehow getting rid of immigrants or getting rid of a minority might actually help the economy.
And I think our paper clearly shows that that's complete nonsense. We don't mean to suggest that
economic losses are the most serious thing about the Holocaust.
You know, the horrible loss of human life and the horrible suffering is clearly the first order shocking thing about Nazi discrimination.
But we're economists and we study the economy.
So you've measured the effect of the removal of a discriminated class.
How do you measure the omission of a discriminated class when some group is not allowed to even enter the economic or political or cultural mainstream in the first place?
There's work by Gary Becker, who was at the University of Chicago.
And his theory suggests that whenever people have some dislike of a subgroup, that will have economic effects. In particular, it will harm the discriminated,
but it will also harm the discriminators economically, because the discriminators
are foregoing economic benefits from interacting with that discriminated group. For example,
if you're not willing to hire highly talented women or highly talented black people in the US,
then you're missing out on their talent, and therefore your firm and your country is going to do worse.
This theory of Gary Becker's came to be known as taste-based discrimination.
Another model of discrimination is called statistical discrimination.
The idea there is that an employer infers certain qualities about an individual based
on their subgroup, like race,
gender, sexual orientation, or religious affiliation. I asked Huber how these different
models of discrimination, taste-based and statistical, intersect with his research.
Yeah, so we think of our setting as an extreme case of taste-based discrimination,
where people just forego all economic logic and just really dislike a group and therefore exclude them from the economy.
Is there any sense of whether taste-based or statistical is more damaging?
So these are very sensitive questions that you're asking me. In the US, all types of
discrimination is illegal. And so even if you believe for good reasons you are discriminating,
you're not allowed to do that. And so even if you believe for good reasons you are discriminating, you're not allowed
to do that. And so people have sometimes sold statistical discrimination as a softer or rational
form of discrimination, but neither of them are okay. I'm hesitant to put a good versus bad label
on them because for moral reasons and for legal reasons, in fact, they're both very dangerous.
It's just that there's an economic motivation to one and non-economic motivation to the other.
Coming up after the break, we put these theories of discrimination to the test in America.
I think it was the first time white America felt compelled to root for a black man.
I'm Stephen Dubner. We'll be right back.
There are many forms of discrimination and many channels.
So if you're trying to measure the economic costs of a discriminatory act, you need to consider the particulars. The expulsion of Jewish business executives in Nazi Germany was an abrupt reversal of the status quo. The fact that it was abrupt
allowed Killian Huber to isolate and calculate the impact. For an economist like Huber,
this alignment of timing and data is relatively rare.
So you need a large shock to attitudes about a minority, and then you need people to act on these changes. And you need to make sure that you can then trace how these changes in attitudes
ultimately affected firms and affected people in the economy.
More common, however, are forms of discrimination that prevent a discriminated group
from fully assimilating into society and the economy altogether. Consider, for instance,
the story of the great American boxer Joe Louis. He was a Black man born in Alabama
who moved with his family to Detroit when he was about 12.
Joe Louis became an obsession for me and remains so.
That is Zilke Maria Weineck.
I'm a professor of comparative literature and German studies at the University of Michigan.
And what does a German studies and conflict professor have to do with Joe Lewis and
discrimination in America?
I was dreading that question. I came to Joe Lewis because I was co-writing a book with
Stephen Szymanski about sports in Detroit. Szymanski is a sports economist, by the way,
also Vinex colleague at Michigan and her partner as well. I was a lot more interested in Detroit
and in the narratives around sport because sport is really the biggest global
cultural practice. And we in cultural studies, I think, have neglected it to our peril.
As you can perhaps tell from her accent, Weineck, like Killian Huber, is German.
I grew up in Münster in northwest Germany. I came to America in 1987,
first to Johns Hopkins and then to the University of Pennsylvania, got married, had kids, got stuck
in this country, and then had the great good luck to land this job at the University of Michigan,
where I have been since 1998. The book Sheehan Shemansky wrote is called City of Michigan, where I have been since 1998. The book she and Szymanski wrote is called
City of Champions, a history of triumph and defeat in Detroit. Weinick's research led her
to this conclusion. Joe Lewis is without a doubt the most important athlete Detroit has ever produced.
In examining the history of sports in Detroit, Weineck found that sport was in constant collision
with race and with industry,
especially the auto industry.
Detroit was shaped by successive waves
of migration and immigration,
beginning with migrations from Eastern Europe
and from Germany,
and then later the great migration from the American South to the American North.
The big player in this whole development was without a question Henry Ford and his $5 a day promise to his workers.
And what was new and unheard of was that Ford actually paid the same wages to black workers as to white workers.
Joe Lewis's family came to Detroit because of Ford's wages.
And Joe Lewis himself worked briefly, I think as a stock boy at the River Rouge plant.
But what Joe Lewis was primarily was a boxer at a time when boxing was the most popular sport in the world. By his mid-20s, he had become the heavyweight champion of the world,
a title he'd hold for nearly 12 years.
He was known as the Brown Bomber, and he was an icon.
And your people's going out tonight.
Let's go and see Joe Louis fight.
He was so deeply beloved, particularly in the black community.
I don't think there's any precedent.
I'm not sure anybody has ever reached that level of affection since.
Joe Louis was clearly embraced by white America as well as an exceptional athlete.
Because the men's record, which is a great thing about sports,
you can't argue with that kind of success, right?
Joe Lewis is a two-fist fighter.
And he stands six feet tall.
One reason Joe Lewis became so popular in America
was because of a pair of fights he had with Max Schmeling from
Nazi Germany. The first fight took place relatively early in Lewis's career in 1936.
It was at Yankee Stadium in New York and Schmeling won in a 12th round knockout.
The rematch took place in 1938, again at Yankee Stadium. By now, Lewis was the heavyweight champion. By now, the Nazi regime
had overtaken Austria and was well on its way to war. Inside Germany, the purge of Jewish business
executives, scientists, and others was also well underway. Schmeling himself apparently did not
embrace Nazism, but this nuance was lost in the buildup to the second Schmeling-Lewis fight.
This is the feature attraction,
15 rounds for the world's heavyweight championship.
Max Schmeling was seen as not just Hitler's favorite boxer,
but practically as an embodiment of Hitler's regime.
In America, it was very heavily sold
as a democratic pluralism versus a fascism fight.
In Germany, that was actually not the case
because the Nazis were heinous, but they were not all stupid.
And they knew that Joe Louis had a very good chance of winning this.
I have Lewis right and left to the head, I'm left to the jaw, I'm right to the head.
70,000 people in Yankee Stadium, 100 million people listening on the radio.
Biggest sports event to date ever.
And it's over in two minutes and four seconds.
And Schmeling is down.
The count is five, five, six, seven, eight.
The men are in the ring.
The fight is over on a technical knockout.
First round knockout.
Lewis not just winning, but Max Schmeling being transported to the hospital post haste.
And in a later interview, Lewis will say that Max Schmeling was the only opponent he ever wanted to hurt.
I think it was the first time white America felt compelled to root for a black man. The celebrations were just enormous.
Tallulah bankhead, you know, screaming her head off
and Woody Gusby cables in.
Everybody's watching this, right?
Absolutely everybody.
The celebrations in Black neighborhoods
last for days.
So Joe Louis was an American hero
and he kept the world heavyweight title
for another 10 years.
By 1948, he wanted to hang up his gloves. The war
was over. Lewis was in his mid-30s. So what did the world's most beloved athlete want to do for
his second act? So his idea was he wanted to sell Fords. Ford was one of his first jobs,
and he wanted to open his own Ford dealership. As Weineck learned in her research,
Joe Lewis met personally with Henry Ford II,
who was by now the company's CEO.
Lewis now lived in Chicago,
and that's where he wanted to open a dealership.
Ford then deputizes his general sales manager,
Walker Alonzo Williams,
to test the waters and to get the reactions of dealers and
general managers. To test the waters because Joe Lewis would be the first Black person to run a
Ford dealership. And a file of these responses were in Williams' estate. With the help of an
archivist at the Benson Ford Research Center,
Vynik was able to track down this file.
Its existence was apparently unknown to any previous biographers of Joe Lewis.
And so I get this file and you open the PDF and the stench rises from your computer screen.
The file included 32 memos from Ford dealers and district managers around the country.
They were responding to a question from Ford headquarters.
I think the question was, we have had an inquiry from Joe Lewis,
who seeks to open a Ford dealership in Chicago.
What is your reaction?
Do you think this would set a precedent?
What's so interesting in the responses, and I'll read you some of them, that every single one understands that the
question is, should we let a black man sell Fords? As opposed to, should we let Joe Lewis
open a dealership? Is that what you mean? Exactly. As opposed to, is Joe Lewis a good
car salesman? Or is Chicago a good market right now? People don't
even pretend it's about anything other than race. Here, from the archive, are some of the excerpted
responses. The Ford business is a white man's business, and we do not want any Negroes in it.
Another one. The writer is bitterly against the possibility
of the appointment of Negro dealers
and lacks words to express his feelings against the idea.
Here's another one.
If we wish to pioneer a principle
of American democracy in business,
of the nature of an appointment of this kind,
it is my opinion that this is not the proper time,
nor the proper party involved.
I assume Joe Lewis didn't get a Ford dealership.
He did not get a Ford dealership, you'll be surprised to hear.
Neither did any other Black men until the Civil Rights Act passed.
Now, there may have been other reasons to deny Joe Louis a Ford dealership besides the fact he
was Black. But the rejections, at least the ones that found
their way into the archive, were united in their focus on race. I asked Vinek whether Ford or the
other big three automakers discussed having black dealers if only to appeal to black buyers.
What a lot of these guys say is, look, there are no black dealers. Well, also,
black buyers are going to go. Also, a lot of the dealerships hired black salesmen,
which would be kept off the lot, which would operate off-site,
would exclusively deal with black clients.
But appointing a black dealer is, of course, a different thing
because a dealer is not just an employee.
He's an employer.
And Joe Lewis, I will die on that hell, would have sold a lot of cars.
He would have cornered the black market in the Midwest and beyond.
I mean, you have your basic economic theory that says discrimination is stupid, it's bad for business, right?
This goes back to the Gary Becker theory of discrimination.
When firms discriminate, they're leaving money on the table.
There's also the theory
that diversity creates opportunity.
Killian Huber again.
There is, in fact,
some theoretical work by colleagues of mine
that suggests that a large share
of U.S. economic growth in the last century
was due to the removal of barriers
facing women and facing black people
and getting to the economic positions that
their talents deserve. It is, of course, hard to say what sort of economic position any one person
might achieve. Joe Lewis was one of the best boxers ever. You could imagine his athletic
afterlife would have been much better if he'd simply been white. As it was, he fell deep into debt to the IRS especially,
and drug addiction. In his last years, he worked as a greeter at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas,
and he died in 1981. He was 66 years old. What always gets me really in the gut is that Max Schmeling, Hitler's favorite boxer, did extremely well, lived to a very old age.
But not only that, he was awarded the Coca-Cola franchise for northern Germany.
So if you think of the iconic American products you probably have ford right up there and then
you have coca-cola at the very top so the former nazi boxer gets to sell coca-cola becomes immensely
rich dies at a very ripe old age whereas the proponent of democracy american pluralism
and apple pie dies poor unhealthy and as a greeter at Caesar's Palace.
Did you have conversations with anyone at Ford once you discovered these letters?
I have not had conversations with Ford themselves. I would very much like to talk to Ford about
naming a plant, a building, or something after Joe Louis in a kind of belated act of reparations for this really horrendous file.
Do you think that would be a successful act of reparations,
or would it feel like window dressing?
I mean, they literally turned the guy down.
I'm in a business where we have to think that symbols matter, right?
That symbolic acts do matter.
They can never substitute for actual reparations.
I'm not saying, oh, name a
plant after Joe Lewis and you're done. I think in the end, of course, Ford can change this and Ford
can change this by investing. By investing in black dealerships, you need a lot more capital now
to start a dealership because they're so much bigger than they used to be. Ford could also make sure that Black-owned dealerships are placed
in the best locations where they actually have the best chance of succeeding.
According to the National Association of Minority Auto Dealers, fewer than 2% of Ford dealerships
have a Black owner. Barely 5% are owned by any minority. A recent paper by three economists
looked at discriminatory hiring within Fortune 500 companies. They found that
five of the top 10 discriminatory firms were auto retailers. These days, of course,
many firms and institutions are trying to undo and reverse the discrimination that's been standard operating
procedure for most of history. Many institutions have adopted a DEI program that stands for
diversity, equity, and inclusion. This can often include a diversity mandate with set targets for
minority hires. This suggests a fundamental economic question. If discrimination can be costly for firms, what sort of benefits are created by diversity?
This is a good question.
The answer is coming up.
I'm Stephen Dubner, and you are listening to Freakonomics Radio. Sophie Calder-Wang is an economist at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
She and two co-authors, Paul Gompers and Kevin Wong,
recently published a study about the potential benefits of diversity.
The particular setting is an MBA program at Harvard Business School.
From 2013 to 2016, they ran a course which asked students to form small teams of entrepreneurial startups.
What is curious is that the first time they launched this class, instead of asking people to form their own teams, the course
administrator had this idea of why don't we just sort people into teams using a computer algorithm
so that we can make sure every team have a balanced ratio of men to women, of minorities and whatnot.
In 2014, 2015, they scrapped the computer algorithm and said, people, you can form your own teams
by your own choice. Thank you, HBS, for setting up a beautiful experiment for me, right?
I mean, it is very close to the real world, even though it is a class and not an actual startup.
It's as close as you could get, really, yeah? Yeah, obviously, there are some differences,
but they actually get graded by a panel of judges, which is comprised of their own section leader, their faculty advisor, and a number of industry judges who are actually practitioners in VC and entrepreneurship.
So the grades should give you some resemblance of what actually matters in these fundraising rounds in startups.
And what sort of startup ideas are they coming up with?
Folks come up with businesses that are pretty similar to a typical early stage startup,
but less fleshed out.
So Uber for X, Y, and Z, let's say.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
Airbnb for dogs.
What Calder-Wang would be measuring then was the performance of groups that were assembled
by the algorithm versus groups where the members chose themselves.
The Harvard Business School data that she analyzed covered four years of students.
So this was basically a thousand students each year.
So four thousand students in total.
Each team is about five to six people.
So you wind up with something like a thousand teams, which in the realm of firm level outcomes is a decent sample.
I know in the world of big data, a thousand is tiny.
But in the world of most academic experiments,
this is gigantic.
Yeah, exactly.
How do you control for intelligence
and talent and connections?
We control, for lack of a better word,
the ranking of their undergraduate institutions.
We control for whether they have worked
in the startup sector before.
And to the extent that you think a certain demographic group is just disproportionately
more prepared than other groups, we actually can also control for just a fraction of, say,
white students. What about GMAT scores? Are you including that?
If you can help me convince the administration to share with us the GMAT scores,
we're working on that because we want to make sure the errors are not biased.
The student population was a relatively diverse mix of men and women from various ethnic and racial backgrounds. Calder-Wang found that when students could choose collaborators for themselves,
the groups were significantly less diverse than when the algorithm created intentionally diverse
groups. Given how human beings work, you probably don't find this surprising.
So how did the organically chosen groups perform compared to the randomly assigned groups,
or what Calder-Wang calls the randomly assigned groups, or what Calder Wang calls
the forced diversity groups? What we find in the randomly assigned cohort,
one standard deviation increase in diversity leads to about 15% degradation in their performance. Whereas in the organic formation teams, one standard deviation
increase in diversity is only about three to five percent degradation in performance.
So we're talking about a three to five times difference, right?
Yes, yes.
In other words, when people were allowed to choose on their own.
When people were allowed to choose on their own, diverse teams perform just fine. The problem lies when you are forced to work together in a diverse team. And that's why I manufactured this word of forced diversity as opposed to organic diversity. We always have this notion that diversity might lead to better performances,
and we were actually fairly annoyed because we found the coefficient to be negative.
What are we to make of this finding? I mean, what are the mechanisms by which those teams do worse?
So what we are finding is when people are matched with teams that are the same in terms
of both gender and ethnicity, these teams do much better than teams that mismatch on
both dimensions or on either dimensions, actually.
It's not like one subgroup is the biggest culprit, as far as we can tell.
Now, I'm sure communication is a component to it,
but at that point, I'm also guessing. I have to say, when I read your research,
and then I read, let's say, the Wall Street Journal talking about how American firms in
particular are moving toward what I guess I would now call, thanks to you and your research,
diversity, right? Yeah. So let me just read you here. An analysis released in June found that nearly 75% of
new independent directors at companies in the S&P 500 are women or belong to a racial or ethnic
minority. So that's a massive jump. Furthermore, NASDAQ has recently required that listed companies
need to meet certain minimum targets for the gender and ethnic diversity of their boards or explain in writing why they aren't doing so. Now, I think most people
would look at that movement and say, well, it's about time, right? Too much business has been too
white and male for too long at the exclusion of other groups who want to be there. But when I read your paper, I think,
uh-oh, things might not turn out the way people are hoping they turn out. And maybe all we're
getting here is window dressing that's going to lead to bad results, that's going to have a
backlash. So what do you predict? This paper is not meant to bash any sort of mandated diversity policies, but just to highlight one potential negative consequence. We clearly have inequality in outcome, but in an attempt to address the inequality of outcome, I think we're a little bit lazy to think about what is the cause that actually lead to the inequality of the outcome. So these board
policies that, you know, required increased representation from women or from underrepresented
minorities is an attempt to change the outcome without being very thoughtful in understanding the cause and to actually remove the cause.
I would like to spend more time to think about not necessarily how to achieve equality of outcome by manipulating the outcome,
but rather to unearth, you know, the path towards us achieving some form of equality or opportunity and to find out what changes
in the existing institutions and the framework can be done to achieve that.
I'm curious about your own views on this research, especially what drew you to this topic in the first place?
For me, it's a little bit personal. As a woman, I'm naturally interested in gender diversity. I've worked in the corporate sector. Prior to grad school, I worked briefly slash unsuccessfully
as an investment banker at Goldman. And I very much admire the efficiency and the business savviness
exhibited by the firm. But on the other hand, it struck me as a corporate environment that is very
challenging for the woman to thrive. The nature of the work is such that it is inherently a very
difficult trade-off. The underlying challenges of child care, for example.
So an economist like Claudia Golden, the labor economist in examining the gender pay gap,
she's noted that a lot of the pay gap is due to, you know, sorting, occupational sorting.
So a female lawyer, rather than maybe becoming
a partner in a top-tier firm because of the demands that make it very difficult to have a
family, will sort into, let's say, general counsel. I'm curious for you, did you sort into academia
for a similar reason? I wouldn't deny it. It's not that I work any less harder in academia. To be honest, I feel like
it was a process for someone who is an immigrant, who is not white, whose first language is not
English to fit into a fast-moving corporate environment. I was sitting across the table from numerous 80-year-old banking CEOs, I find it very difficult to convince them why this proposal makes any sense for them.
Where did you grow up, Sophie?
I was born in China. I went to school there until about middle school and then a few years in India before immigrating to the United States.
So let's say we assume that the presence of someone like you, you yourself, Sophie Calderwang,
would be beneficial to an investment bank because not only do you bring a different set of experience, but you have a different perspective. And banking is, you know, it does involve humans to a large degree. So if I want to think holistically, and I really do believe that diversity is good from a very difficult and empirically you've shown that
forced diversity at least is not very successful what's to be done that is the million billion
dollar question and the moral question not all the like the right work is the easy work so some
work is going to be hard and you may not see direct impact immediately.
Sophie Calderwang has written another paper that gives some reason for optimism.
In an analysis of venture capitalists, and that's a field that is overwhelmingly male,
she found that parenting more daughters leads to an increased
propensity to hire female partners. She also found that greater gender diversity, not forced
by an algorithm, but driven by the experience of having a daughter, improves deal and fund
performances. Obviously, we can't require everyone to parent daughters and go through the challenges of that.
But you could require every CEO to adopt a baby that is of a different ethnic background than themselves, right?
You could require the CEO to spend a weekend doing something shoes is a great display of sympathy and understanding, even Huber's research about the Jewish business executives in Germany,
expelled first from their jobs, then their homes, many of them ultimately murdered by the Nazis.
It is a highly imperfect parallel to compare that campaign of brutality to the sort of
discrimination that has shaped our labor markets. Still, I asked Huber whether his research suggests
any policy thoughts for the modern era. I think there's an underlying theme that comes out of our
research, but also more generally economic research in recent years. And that theme is
good people are really important. And to a large extent, what drives economic growth
is the presence of good people.
And so whatever governments can do to try and stimulate good people into coming up with
good ideas will be key.
I also asked Huber how he had been taught about the Nazi era in school.
So the Nazi period, the Holocaust, World War II, plays a large role in German education,
and rightly so. I asked the same question of Silke Maria Weineck, plays a large role in German education, and rightly so.
I asked the same question of Silke Maria Weineck, who also grew up in Germany.
It was absolutely central to almost every curriculum, whether it was literature or
history or social studies. It was everywhere. Germany took it extremely seriously at the time
I went to school. People are extremely aware and it defines the culture of modern Germany to a large extent.
When I came to America, a lot of Americans assumed that Germany would have buried this history and that I would know nothing about it, which is just the artist's misunderstanding to me. I think that it's still important to try and not only treat it as something that's in the
history books, but try and live with the history, wrestle with it, and try and make it come alive
in all its horrible form. You learn about a lot of the parallels that appear between Nazi Germany
discrimination and modern discrimination, and perhaps you can contribute to preventing
those horrendous types of discrimination in the future.
Thanks to Killian Huber, Zilke Maria Weineck,
and Sophie Calder-Wang
for sharing their research and insights today.
Thanks also to the archivist Sam Rood
for sharing with Weineck that file of letters about Joe Louis.
We always value feedback from you.
So let us know what you think of this or any episode.
We are at radio at Freakonomics.com.
Coming up next time on the show, a story about what some people call piracy,
but not the kind of pirates you're thinking about.
I think fundamentally, these people with just dollar signs
as their goal
plundered something really wonderful.
How worried should we be
about the degree to which private equity
is shaping the economy?
I suppose if I thought that
it was good for society,
I wouldn't have called the book Plunder.
That's next time.
Also, a quick word about last week's episode,
which was the final part of our series called How to Succeed at Failing.
We talked about how academic journals tend to publish only experiments
that produce a successful result.
And we wondered if there should be a journal of failure.
As it turns out, there is at least one such journal already out there. It's
called the Journal of Articles in Support of the Null Hypothesis. Thanks to Timothy Veach for
pointing this out. Also, if you would like to have a very expensive cup of coffee with me, well,
there is a charity auction where that is the prize. It's for the Barracuda Foundation, which
is dedicated to creating equal opportunities in sport for women, minorities, and adaptive sport athletes. To make
a bid, search online for Charity Buzz, click on that, and then search for my name. Last year,
it went for $2,500. So let's try to beat that. And one more announcement. On Monday, November 13th at 4.30 p.m. Eastern time,
I will be doing an Ask Me Anything on X, also known as Twitter. So join me there at Freakonomics.
Or if you want to send a question ahead of time, our email is radio at Freakonomics.com.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio. You can find our entire archive
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where we also publish transcripts and show notes.
This episode was produced by Zach Lipinski
and mixed by Greg Rippin.
Our staff also includes Alina Kullman,
Eleanor Osborne, Elsa Hernandez, Gabriel Roth,
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of our music is composed by Luis Guerra. As always, thanks for listening.
It's always a bit of a cliche, right? It's kind of white,
woke academics go to Detroit and fall in love with it.
A lot of Detroiters are very annoyed by people like us.
I'm annoyed by you and I don't even live there,
I just want to say.
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