February 15, 2009

And so it begins ...

From a writer's perspective, the late Daniel Seligman's Keeping Up column in Fortune was a print forerunner of the blog in that it generally consisted of multiple items of variable length. The items presumably had to add up to a fixed number of word for each issue, but the individual postings didn't have to be of any length, and sometimes consisted merely of a quote from somebody else with a funny title.

This feature of blogging -- no minimum or maximum length per post -- helps many people overcome the writer's block associated with the feeling that you'll never be able to come up with enough words on a topic to justify a column or that you'll never be able to get your point across in few enough words to fit in a column.

More still timely Seligmania:
December 2, 1991

MORTGAGE MOONSHINE

Confess! According to Barney Frank, the irredeemably liberal Massachusetts Democrat -- with a solid 94% rating from Americans for Democratic Action -- that is what the bankers of America must now do. They should penitently acknowledge they done wrong, and not react to the news "in a wholly defensive, negative way."

As to what the bankers should confess to, opinions vary, but politicians with high ADA ratings seem unanimous in believing that their mortgage-lending departments must now plead guilty to racial discrimination. Evidence of their bias is said to lie in the recent Federal Reserve study showing that mortgage applications are disproportionately turned down when the applicant is black or Hispanic. Even when you control for income level, these groups did far worse than whites applying for mortgages. In the highest income category examined -- one in which the applicants had incomes at least 20% above the average for their metropolitan statistical area -- 21.4% of black applications were turned down, vs. 15.8% for Hispanics and only 8.5% for whites.

Among the Congresspersons screeching loudest about these data have been Bay Stater Joseph P. Kennedy II (ADA rating: 89%) and Henry B. Gonzalez of Texas (100%). "It matters not whether the discrimination is intentional," says Gonzalez, chairman of the House Banking Committee. "Discrimination by ignorance is just as . . . destructive as discrimination by design." Gonzalez and Kennedy introduced the legislation requiring the Fed to compile mortgage-rejection data with breakouts for race and income, which is possibly why they think the figures are so compelling.

The babble over the Fed study has been bizarre on two counts. First, you need a lot more than income data to establish whether mortgage applicants are creditworthy. At a minimum, you would also want data on their credit histories, employment records, and savings. (A 1983 survey by the Fed showed that on average white families have four times the assets of black families.) One hilarious undercurrent at the marathon October 21 press conference announcing the findings was the effort of Federal Reserve Governor John LaWare and others onstage to (a) keep reminding the assembled media folk of these critical omissions while (b) still earnestly trying to represent that the final report was somehow or other quite useful.

Weirder still has been the deafening silence in the media and Congress about another matter: the data on Asian-Americans, whose mortgage applications were also studied by the Fed. It turns out that rejection rates for Asian-Americans were lower than those for whites. Taking together applications at all income levels for mortgages to buy homes, we find that whites had rejection rates of 13.8%, Asian-Americans of 12.9%.

How does that fit into a discrimination-based explanation of the different rejection rates? We called Gonzalez's office demanding (politely) an answer to this question. His office said he is still studying the data. The young lady from Kennedy's office got back to us with a formal statement incorporating the thought that "Asians are repeatedly rejected for mortgage loans at higher rates than whites." We noted that the data said otherwise, at which point she began yalking about certain metropolitan areas where Asians did worse than whites. We were on the verge of pointing out that this implied the existence of still more areas in which they did better than whites but sensed that she might not be able to sell this thought to her boss, as it could only serve to depress him, not to mention his ADA rating.

My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer

7 comments:

  1. Where are the voices of reason like this today? No wonder print media is going out of business - after a while their gullibility in taking every press release at face value tires. I'm not sure there's a critical thinker left at any major publications.

    Speaking of which, the Carlos Slim money seems to have come with an agreement for a pro-immigration article per day - and the NYT has come through, as people indebted to a master will, with a convoluted argument that more immigration will actually increase wages. No supply or demand curves needed.

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  2. "Where are the voices of reason like this today?"

    Even if there were any voices of reason in a major publication today, it wouldn't make a difference. Not enough to change the zeitgeist.

    Thomas Sowell has been writing essays and syndicated columns that touch on many of these issues for decades...

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  3. "Speaking of which, the Carlos Slim money seems to have come with an agreement for a pro-immigration article per day - and the NYT has come through, as people indebted to a master will, with a convoluted argument that more immigration will actually increase wages. No supply or demand curves needed."

    That surprises me. Pinch and friends don't seem like the usual WASP types who continually yearn to fall prostrate before imagined masters, be they black, Hispanic, Muslim or whatever. I would think this fits into the ideological framework of Pinch.

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  4. Chief Seattle:

    It's almost 30 years ago (1980) that I came to the conclusion (after 40 years of avid, two-a-day
    newspaper reading) that it was better to be uninformed than misinformed (and propagandized).

    Since that time, I haven't read a newspaper or newsmagazine. Dropped TV news altogether, too, though, in the last 10 years or so have come to watch news or O'Reilly once or twice a week.

    When you're swimming in it, it's impossible to keep from swallowing some.

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  5. Confess! According to Barney Frank, the irredeemably liberal Massachusetts Democrat -- with a solid 94% rating from Americans for Democratic Action -- that is what the bankers of America must now do.

    Only 94%?

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  6. Ronduck:

    Only 94%?

    Yeah. Must be more than one way he's "light in the loafers."

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  7. Online journalism arrived 30 years too late. (Maybe 130.)

    Even then it's questionable whether it could compete with TV.

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