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Rights and Liberties

New Book Makes Dangerous Claim That Inequality Is Genetic

By Jesse Reynolds, AlterNet. Posted January 18, 2008.


Gregory Clark's book A Farewell to Alms suggests that race- and class-based inequality is inherent -- perhaps even deserved.
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Bold books that offer grand theses to explain the course of human history are risky endeavors. Few such attempts rightfully linger in the collective conscious: from the 18th century's The Wealth of Nations to the following century's Das Capital and potentially to the relatively recent Guns, Germs, and Steel. But most are quickly forgotten. If these are judged on the merit of the arguments, Gregory Clark's A Farewell to Alms: A Brief Economic History of the World, will quickly end up in the latter category.

Clark, an economic historian and the chair of the economics department at the University of California, Davis, asks a fundamental question of history: Why did the Industrial Revolution occur where and when it did? In other words, why did the global economy diverge? Why did northern Europe, particularly England, grow rich while the most of the rest of the world remained in poverty? And why haven't other areas caught up?

The answer he proposes is both beautifully simple and excessively reductionist. By essentially ignoring institutions such as government and religion, major developments, and power relations, his analysis is shackled by historical myopia. But the implications of his hypothesis go beyond 19th century British history. Clark's proposals have both explicit and implicit consequences for current political and economic debates. The author would have us embrace a retrograde social Darwinism, in which the wealthy of the world are on top of society's ladder due to superior culture and genetics.

Before 1800, Clark asserts, Britain was mired for centuries in a "Malthusian trap." Resources for survival were more limited than reproduction, causing a significant portion of people to die before having children. Innovations may have improved life temporarily, but the economic gains were quickly diluted among the subsequent greater number of surviving descendants.

During this time, four behaviors critical to the rise of industrial capitalism and the break from the trap became more prevalent: literacy, thrift, hard work and less violence. Although these "middle class values," as Clark dubs them, emerged gradually among the British, the wealthy exhibited them earlier and to a greater degree. Furthermore, the upper class also had better reproductive success than the general population, a result that Clark calls the "survival of the richest." Since the higher number of survivors among the wealthy split inheritances, medieval Britain was characterized by downward mobility. Though the heirs of the wealthy were poorer than their parents, their generational economic descent helped propagate their cultural characteristics of success throughout society.

Clark provides fascinating evidence to back up some of these claims. A key part of his extensive economic research is a survey of wills. Contrary to intuition, plenty of poorer British men (and the testators were overwhelming male) bequeathed their meager possessions to their children. The wills demonstrate that the wealthy did, in fact, have a greater numbers of surviving children. Using the ability to sign one's name as a proxy for literacy, Clark concludes that they were also more likely to be literate. Clark uses similar methods based on an impressive, diverse array of historical sources to demonstrate the rise of longer work hours, decreased interpersonal violence and stronger savings. Unfortunately, he too often supports broad generalizations with temporally and spatially narrow data. While this is understandable, given the limitations of records, it occasionally weakens his assertions.

Perhaps the most notable aspect of Clark's theory is its radical "economism." He reduces major institutional or political developments to simple quests for greater economic efficiency. Slavery, for example, is presented as merely an economically inefficient allocation of labor resources, as it prevented slaves from seeking the most productive use of their labor. Like other suboptimal institutions, it was only a matter of time before the economic advantages outweigh the benefits of oppression. So much for abolitionism's moral sway.

This reductionism allows, or causes, Clark to ignore history beyond his lens of efficiency. However, shifts such as the Magna Carta, the Protestant Reformation, the Glorious Revolution, the Thirty Years' War and the English Civil War certainly played no small part in altering balances of power within British society, consequently laying the groundwork for the Industrial Revolution.

For example, Clark chooses to overlook the enormous competitive advantages utilized by the northern European nations, and particularly their elite classes, by centuries of slavery and colonialism. However inefficient these systems may have been, they were forcefully maintained by their beneficiaries to transfer staggering values of expropriated labor and natural resources from conquered lands. But just as his brief discourse on slavery merely highlights its inefficiency, one of Clark's few passages on colonialism asserts that subjugated areas actually benefited economically due to the increased political stability conferred by their imperial conquerors. In an interview about his book, the author revives the white man's burden, claiming that the British "were not systematically exploiting India. They were in fact offering India the enormous possibility of becoming the second great industrial power in the world. That didn't happen, but it wasn't because of anything the British did. It was because of what happened internally in India."


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See more stories tagged with: inequality, values, middle class, genetics, race, class, england, gregory clark, a farewell to alms

Jesse Reynolds is the director of the project on Biotechnology in the Public Interest at the Center for Genetics and Society, a nonprofit advocacy organization and a contributor to its Biopolitical Times blog.

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Inequality is one by product of the uniqueness the human genome imparts.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jan 19, 2008 8:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Banish the thought that you may stereotype everyone you see as duh same. People are not your average laboratory mouse strain; they are diverse and unique as a product of the genetic code and as a product of their upbringing. People have variations in their physical and biochemical characteristics, period. Time to accept that you aren't a clone, and move on.

The "sardine theory" of equality smells quite fishy.

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So, the people of India wouldn't work "hard enough" for the British?
Posted by: Longdream on Jan 19, 2008 12:26 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm shocked, honest to God.

Those little factors, "government and religion, major developments, and power relations" are a bit much to write off in order to make a quasi-scientific conclusion about economics. In fact, I'm not the chair of any economics department anywhere, but I thought those things were an essential part of any such theory or forecast.

Anyone looking to study economics ought to scratch UC, Davis off their list of places to do it.

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No. It's not necessarily genetic.
Posted by: buzzsaw on Jan 19, 2008 2:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's no doubt over-simplified, but my half-baked theory of the "superiority" of the British and other Northern Europeans over people who live near the equator is based on the interaction of people with their environment.

It all goes back to the growing season. Near the equator, when you get hungry, you go pick something. There is always something edible growing, all you have to do is avoid the poisonous stuff. No long-term planning necessary. Away from the equator, there is winter when very little food grows. In the old days, if you didn't store enough food during the harvest season to last until the next growing season, you and your family starved. This required the ability to make long-range plans and carry them out. The ability to do this would be valued and developed by the culture since it contributed to the culture's survival. Planning skills coupled with scarcity-derived ambition and aggression resulted in exploration and conquest. People lacking planning skills couldn't muster adequate defense against determined invaders and were conquered. Since the age of conquest, for good or bad, fairly or not, success and failure have been judged by Northern European standards.

To the extent that those who starved due to lack of these abilities failed to pass on their genes, there could be a hereditary aspect to these skills. I would like to believe that the ability to make and execute sophisticated plans is something that any person can learn and benefit from, regardless of their particular cultural background.

buzzsaw-who could use a little more of both ambition and planning skills

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Nothing Genetic About It
Posted by: Longdream on Jan 19, 2008 5:06 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's just natural selection, stated simply. When applied to Homo Sapiens, it holds true for sweeping, unconscious motion, over thousands of years. Movements like the predominance of black skin on the African continent. An oversimplified explanation that's consistent with natural selection is that the sun is abhorrently strong in Africa, and those with more melanin in their skin were able to cope with it better, work longer, eat more, and were preferred by other, stronger, blacker folks, who bred with them, etcetera, and so on.

Animals on up to men don't breed with each other because of their skills. They breed with other members of the species who are sexually attractive, or in our case, because of other factors which can maybe be stated as dominance. We haven't been walking the planet long enough for necessary life skills to become instinctual, the way they are in animals. They aren't passed along to our offspring. They're taught.

We are the only animal whose young have an extended, helpless babyhood, a childhood, an adolescence for years and years before we become adult. The closest to us are the great apes, who are weaned after several years, and are sexually mature adults at around ten. The difference between us is that apes have a full set of instinctual behaviors, and don't have to be taught about predators, how to find food, etc.

While intelligence is often a matter of genetics, it's also a generation-skipping, capricious crapshoot, and no respecter of race, riches or culture. Of course, when a race of people, say the people of India, is impoverished, and then colonialized, and then trivialized and re-impoverished, by the forbears of a fellow that then writes a book about how it's all some kind of biological imperative, "reductionist" is a very kind word for the kind of insult-to-injury statements that are made.

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» RE: Nothing Genetic About It Posted by: Judynz1
Epigenetics
Posted by: lessbread on Jan 21, 2008 2:48 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Clark is obviously ignorant of the new field of epigenetics. In short, scientists are finding the mechanisms by which nurture turns nature on and off and that the settings for these switches are also inherited. In other words, malnutrition due to exploitation trumps genes. Social Darwinism makes a comeback...

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Recipricol altruism
Posted by: Mycos on Jan 22, 2008 8:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author forgets that we evolved social behaviors long before the development of reading and writing. In fact, as far as civilized behavior goes, the invention of a way to gather more food than was necessary seems to have taken our egalitarian social mores and let our gathering instincts run amok. It's only after the Neolithic Revolution made it possible to hoard food that we see professional soldiers, kings and conquering armies. Now men could specialize in one area only yet survive by being paid for their skill. This newly developed way of keeping track of the excess gives us the impression that men were hostile to each other throughout time, but the evidence all suggests otherwise. The system of accouting allowed tyrants to pay money to others so they'd do their fighting and stealing for them, which of course led straight to the class/caste cultures that are ubiquitous today but were almost certainly unknown prior to the Late Neolithic. The Stone Age tribes we managed to get a look at were either egalitarian Hunter-Gatherers, or "rank" societies....a social structure that allows unequal or unfair access to status, (hereditary chiefs eg. ), but still disbursed wealth in relatively equal shares. To put it another way, man has only been engaging in right-wing behavior for the last 15,000 yrs or so.

Prior to that we lived we lived in small bands of H-G's for a couple million years, and before that we almost certainly lived in a social group more reminiscent of our primate kin today. So despite Christianity's claim that ethics arise solely from religion, the fact is...any creature using a group strategy have all evolved a set of behaviors or a social code of conduct that allows cooperation. Call it what you want, but that's "ethics" to me. Core behaviors like "Thou shalt not kill each other on site" or "Thou shalt not wind up feeding somebody else's offspring for 20 years" are about matters that nature took care of a few million years before Abraham ever started hearing voices.

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Proof against book...
Posted by: PickleBarrel on Jan 22, 2008 12:16 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One Person exists that refutes the entire premise of this book: President Bush!

If he is genetically more competent than I. I'll eat my hat and sue GOD itself!

Nuculer.

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Gregory Clark, the new white man's burden
Posted by: GarrisonPayneLeonard38H on Jan 23, 2008 7:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oh great. Now I have one more thing to be ashamed of.

Seriously, Jesse Reynolds has done an outstanding job of rebutting Clark's ugly little apologia for rapacity, avarice, and Eur-American class oppression.

I agree that "[Clark] too often supports broad generalizations with temporally and spatially narrow data." In fact, his use of wills to analyze family sizes has an unmentioned drawback: If not adjusted for "predeceases" -- children who die before a parent draws up the will -- Clark's reliance on shares of estates might simply measure the greater likelihood that infants and children in poor families will predecease their parents.

While it is true that "There are no known genes for Clark's middle-class values.", there is good evidence from which to postulate an Ayn Rand Gene, and to deduce that Clark is a possessor of that gene. (OK, I'm kidding: It is merely plausible that an Ayn Rand Gene exists.)

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If not genetic then cultural, a learned response.
Posted by: billwald on Jan 23, 2008 2:20 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If not genetic, then cultural. On the Left Coast most of the school scholarships and awards are being earned by Chinese, VietNamese, and Korean . . . students. Is that because the white majority prefers Chinese people over white people?

Last spring I observed the Washington State math contest finals. Well over half the people looked like main land Asia/Japanese people. I didn't see a single person who appeared to be African-American. Like it or not, the rule of white people in middle management and the professions will be over in a generation.

If the African American community wants to improve its social/economic standing, the first step might be to replace Black History Month with Japanese History Month and learn how a successful social group operates.

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Superior Civilization?
Posted by: mnascimento on Jan 23, 2008 2:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have often wondered if Pygmies, for example, and other aboriginal peoples, who have managed to wrest a living from their environments for thousands of years without destroying anything, aren't somehow superior.
The problem with Western societies is that they begin by squandering their resources, taking far more than they need. Then it becomes necessary to destroy, repress, or exploit other populations to continue economic growth.
The dominance of the Western economic model has brought the earth to the brink of disaster in just a few hundred years.
I don't think there is any thing to boast about in this history.

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» RE: Superior Civilization? Posted by: GarrisonPayneLeonard38H
A Better Book Answering All of These Questions Was Written Over 100 Years Ago
Posted by: pdxstudent on Jan 26, 2008 11:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Why did the Industrial Revolution occur where and when it did? In other words, why did the global economy diverge? Why did northern Europe, particularly England, grow rich while the most of the rest of the world remained in poverty? And why haven't other areas caught up?"

It's a nifty little book by a nifty little German fellow named Max Weber. His book, which I think has made its own rightful dent in how we understand how the present is preceded by its history, is called "The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism."

I suppose if you mix that in with a little of the ideas put up by Jared Diamond in "Guns, Germs and Steel," you get at least as powerful account as is possible in the trash-rag being talked about in this article, and probably something astoundingly beyond it. At any rate, I believe there is no reason to ask these questions anymore without qualifying why the people who answered them one-hundred years ago were wrong.

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