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Why Are the Public Faces of the Economics Profession So Intellectually Self-lobotomized on Immigration?

Steve Sailer

10/19/2015

One of the best kept secrets of the 21st Century is how large a role Diversity (in its various manifestations) played in housing bubble and bust of the last decade. So I’ve been slowly collecting studies by economists of the subject, such as how much worse the default rate was among minorities and immigrants. Last week in “Immigrants Delinquent on Mortgages 3.6 Times as Often as Natives,” I wrote about a recent study published in Real Estate Economics entitled Immigrants and Mortgage Delinquency and written by Zhenguo Lin, Yingchun Liu and Jia Xie.

Although Lin, Liu, and Xie toss in some boilerplate at the end about how obviously immigrants aren’t to blame for the bubble and bust, they had clearly read up on this question that fascinates me, citing Michelle Malkin as representative of the “media” and asserting that George W. Bush had “famously” said something at his 2002 White House Conference on Increasing Minority Homeownership, which is famous mostly to my readers. It was a good study, showing a much greater curiosity about this crucial question than is considered seemly these days.

And it made me wish economists did more studies of the impact of immigration. Instead, we mostly see big name economists just dogmatically endorsing immigration as obviously something that all smart people know is Good.

Why, you may ask? Because immigration is Good. If you were smart, you’d know that.

So why are famous white American economists so publicly stupid on immigration? I’m using the word stupid not to mean “disagree with me,” but to mean “ignorant,” “poorly read in the literature,” “using obvious logical fallacies,” and “incurious.”

It strikes me that one big reason for the shameful behavior of most brand name economists on the analysis of immigration is the demographics of the economics profession at present, with white American economists at the top of the pyramid lording it over a lot of immigrants. The wealthy old white guys seem to assume that their immigrant underlings don’t want the immigration question studied honestly, so they discourage intelligent discussion.

But who knows? Maybe the immigrants would actually like to study immigration? Perhaps in the future when all the old white American professors have been put out to pasture and people with names like Lin, Liu, and Xie completely dominate the American economics profession, discussion of immigration won’t be so intellectually stilted.

To give some sense of the demographics of the economics profession, here is the table of contents of that recent issue of Real Estate Economics that includes that Lin, Liu, and Xie paper. I’ve put in bold all the economists with names that, judging by the first and last names, don’t sound American: e.g., Leonard Nakamura is assumed to be American and Morten Sorensen to be immigrant. I count 40 immigrant-sounding names and 36 American-sounding names. I didn’t look up the individuals (other than watching a video of Morten Sorensen, who indeed has a Scandinavian accent), so don’t take the precise numbers too seriously, but take the roughly 50-50 split as pretty indicative of the demographics.

Real Estate Economics

Cover image for Vol. 43 Issue 3

Edited By: Sumit Agarwal, Brent W. Ambrose & Abdullah Yavas

Investor Confidence as a Determinant of China’s Urban Housing Market Dynamics

Siqi Zheng, Weizeng Sun and Matthew E. Kahn

Is the FHA Creating Sustainable Homeownership?

Andrew Caplin, Anna Cororaton and Joseph Tracy

Introduction to Special Issue: Government Involvement in Residential Mortgage Markets

W. Scott Frame

How Does the Federal Reserve’s Large-Scale Asset Purchases (LSAPs) Influence Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) Yields and U.S. Mortgage Rates?

Diana Hancock and Wayne Passmore

A Spatiotemporal Solution for the Simultaneous Sale Price and Time-on-the-Market Problem

Jean Dubé and Diègo Legros

Mortgage Loan Characteristics, Unobserved Heterogeneity and the Performance of United Kingdom Securitized Subprime Loans

Gauthier Lanot and David Leece

The Effect of Mortgage Payment Reduction on Default: Evidence from the Home Affordable Refinance Program

Jun Zhu, Jared Janowiak, Lu Ji, Kadiri Karamon and Douglas McManus

The Cost of Foreclosure Delay

Larry Cordell, Liang Geng, Laurie S. Goodman and Lidan Yang

The Subprime Virus

Sumit Agarwal, Brent W. Ambrose and Yildiray Yildirim

A Tale of Two Tensions: Balancing Access to Credit and Credit Risk in Mortgage Underwriting

Marsha J. Courchane, Leonard C. Kiefer and Peter M. Zorn

Do Conspicuous Consumers Pay Higher Housing Premiums? Spatial and Temporal Variation in the United States

Kwan Ok Lee and Masaki Mori

How Do Land Auction Formats Influence the Market Structure and Aggregate Surplus of Real Estate Development?

Zhi Dong and Tien Foo Sing

The Impact of the Home Valuation Code of Conduct on Appraisal and Mortgage Outcomes

Lei Ding and Leonard Nakamura

Did Affordable Housing Legislation Contribute to the Subprime Securities Boom?

Andra C. Ghent, Rubén Hernández-Murillo and Michael T. Owyang

Do Homeowners Mark to Market? A Comparison of Self-Reported and Estimated Market Home Values During the Housing Boom and Bust

Sewin Chan, Samuel Dastrup and Ingrid Gould Ellen

Is Timing Everything? Race, Homeownership and Net Worth in the Tumultuous 2000s

Sandra J. Newman and C. Scott Holupka

The Borrower’s Perceived Risk in Mortgage Choice

Dongshin Kim and Alan J. Ziobrowski

–Nonrecourse Mortgage and Housing Price Boom, Bust, and Rebound

Te Bao and Li Ding

The Risk and Return of Commercial Real Estate: A Property Level Analysis

Liang Peng

Corporate Real Estate Ownership and Productivity Uncertainty

Daxuan Zhao and Tien Foo Sing

The Cap Rate Spread: A New Metric for Commercial Underwriting

Philip A. Seagraves and Jonathan A. Wiley

Servicers and Mortgage-Backed Securities Default: Theory and Evidence

Brent W. Ambrose, Anthony B. Sanders and Abdullah Yavas

The Disciplining Effect of Concern for Referrals: Evidence from Real Estate Agents

Lan Shi and Christina Tapia

Commercial Real Estate Rental Index: A Dynamic Panel Data Model Estimation

Xudong An, Yongheng Deng, Jeffrey D. Fisher and Maggie Rong Hu

Down Payment Saving in the United States: Evidence from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics

A. Talha Yalta

Wages, Housing Prices and Commutes

Tom Mayock

House Price Expectations: Unbiasedness and Efficiency of Forecasters

Jing Zhang

Estimating Loan-to-Value Distributions

Arthur Korteweg and Morten Sorensen

Commuting with Lost Housing Services as the Opportunity Cost

Joseph Williams

How Subprime Borrowers and Mortgage Brokers Shared the Pie

Antje Berndt, Burton Hollifield and Patrik Sandås

Immigrants and Mortgage Delinquency

Zhenguo Lin, Yingchun Liu and Jia Xie

The Long and the Short of Household Formation

Andrew Paciorek

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