May 09, 2004
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A
Bored Reader Discovers A Good Idea About Female
Circumcision And Other Blessings Of Diversity
A Displaced American Quant Reflects
On Those Enterprising Immigrants
From: Displaced
American Quant
I was interested to read the
information on
Those Enterprising Immigrants: One Story. I also had a similar experience as a
quant/programmer in a large commercial bank in NY where
Lincoln Kahn’s Indian roommate could possibly have
worked. I was recruited into the bank from a PhD program
in business by an American manager in the bank.
What I had found disappointing
about my PhD studies was that the field of quantitative
research was centered on quite frivolous theoretical
expositions of managerial decision making. It seemed far
from any relevance to actual business application.
At the time, I thought this
possibly the result of the field being dominated by
immigrant Indians and
Chinese, who had little experience in working in an
American corporation. In fact, they had no experience of
capitalism per se—having climbed the rungs of
socialist academic bureaucracies. As a result, they
had become proficient in the politics of such
bureaucracies, which helped them immensely in the
US academic culture. But the phenomenon was
self-replicating.
Older American academic business
people had an appreciation of useful research. But they
were now giving way to tenured immigrant researchers.
I did not fault my immigrant
colleagues for their proclivities. After all, it would
perhaps be impossible for them to ever fully understand
North American culture, so different from their own
culture of
arranged marriages and
post-colonial command economies.
It was natural for them to avoid
meeting actual business people who inhabited this
strange and foreign world. And again, why make the
effort? They were quite capable if producing numerous
tracts that appealed to their academic colleagues who
had mostly all graduated from the same type of
socio-economic background.
Even more interesting, there
existed ethnic clusters of research. Indians would
review and cite the work of their Indian colleagues.
Departments tended to become Indian or Chinese, but not
both—unless a large American majority held the balance.
Indians and Chinese clashed as they
competed to fill the next academic appointment with one
of their own, until one side won out. Americans were
usually not considered for these appointments on
technical grounds, since their papers generally were
more applied and less to the tastes of socialist
educrats.
On the other hand, American
professors tended to gain a far bigger share of business
consulting projects. Business clients required business
relevancy.
But sometimes an Indian or Chinese
would run the consulting contract. Then they would tend
to farm out business to their cousins in academia.
Really, this is not surprising.
Europeans went through centuries of familial and ethnic
capitalism in the medieval period. It lasted a lot
longer than our own brief period of competitive
capitalism. HBO's The Sopranos evokes this
history, as unscrupulous businessman refer to "our
friends" in New York or New Jersey.
You could call it “mafia
capitalism.” It is an effective method of gaining
wealth—especially in a state with a corrupt public
sector which can allocate wealth along political lines
rather than through competitive markets.
But the final result for American
academe is inefficient output, with lower-quality
research from an overall point of view, even though
individual actors are maximizing their own utility.
Well, I observed this in academia
and left the PhD program to enter the world of business.
But, as time went by, I observed that in business, too,
American researchers were abandoning the hostile fields
of programming and quantitative finance to move into
trading and sales where socialist politics and ethnic
favoritism and conniving were not an issue.
When I finally left the field, in
one of the largest American banks, I was the last
remaining American standing.
Interestingly, I did see a lot of
low-level Americans still working in back and middle
office functions where PhD level training was not
required. They made a good if not impressive living, and
were generally supervised by the new immigrants.
But it seems perfectly predictable
in hindsight that the new immigrants would strive to
outsource these functions to their cousins in
foreign lands. They could benefit on the human resource
front from placement fees, while increasing their
position within the banks through impressively lower
costs and improving their ethnic toehold within the
organization.
Concurrent with these trends was
the issue of intellectual property.
I recall a visit of a high level
Chinese diplomat to New York. He met with both CEO of
the bank and also with a Chinese middle manager who
happened to lead the
Chinese Finance Association, a
networking group dedicated to increasing job
opportunities for Communist Chinese (no
Taiwanese need apply). It was rumored in the bank
that the Chinese researchers would steal the
expensively-produced risk management code of the bank
when they left the institution to share with other
members of the Chinese Finance Association, as also with
their headquarters in Beijing.
Luckily for us, Chinese or Indian
theories of how to run a modern bank faced market
discipline. As a result, they still tend to be clustered
in the regulatory bureaucracies of risk management,
rather than in actual portfolio decision-making.
There is probably a biological
model that applies here. First, we encounter an
infection of academia which has the least amount of
defense to a foreign socialist ethnic insult. The
insult is viral since it takes over the central DNA
decision-making function.
The infection spreads from the
periphery of academia to central systems of high
technology and banking. The metabolism is altered as
emphasis on valued-added function is replaced by the
appearance of value. Hence the implosion of the
high tech bubble, which was all about the culture of
apparent value rather than actual cash flow.
The cost of American technologists
grows, as they seek higher compensation for working in
ethnic enclaves with the constant threat of ethnic
outsourcing and
insourcing. This results in higher importation of
ethnics and further exports of functions to mid-tech
sweat shops overseas. Along with this, technology is
transferred and compromised.
The body, although sick, still
functions and even the virus does not want to kill the
host—not right away anyway. Instead, sickness
progresses.
VDARE.COM is romantic in thinking
that this can be reversed with attention to the original
foreign source of infection.
It's already deeply embedded in the
central organs. One solution is to encourage the use of
existing civil rights laws to fight discriminatory
practice by South and East Asians, while increasing
shareholder power to return American corporations back
to competition. It is really the existence of
bureaucratic quasi-monopolies which allows this to
flourish and fester.
Their mindset goes along way to
explaining why China and India, with so many smart
scientists and engineers, cannot make a
decent car or computer, while most of their
population lies mired in malnourishment, disease, and
extreme poverty.
But this too is the fate of our
children and grandchildren, if the virus goes untreated.