By Steve Sailer
04/03/2023
From the Journal of Political Economy:
Distinctively Black Names and Educational Outcomes
Daniel Kreisman and Jonathan Smith
Abstract
Names can convey information about race or ethnicity and therefore can be used to discriminate against protected groups; many researchers have demonstrated as much through audit studies. Yet few studies link life outcomes with names using observational data. We use administrative data from over 3 million Black students to ask whether those with more statistically Black names have differential educational outcomes. We find that while test scores, college enrollment, and college completion are negatively correlated with Black names net of background characteristics, this relationship is absent when we compare across siblings within households.
I think what this means is that, yeah, black guys named D’Qashnyo do worse than black guys named Darren even when accounting for D’Qashnyos tending to come from a more ghetto background. But is it discrimination against ghetto names? If I’m reading the last sentence right, then … no, Darrens do just as bad as D’Qashnyos when Darren is the brother (presumably full brother) as D’Qashnyo.
Or at least, I think…
This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.