Republished on VDARE.com on June 23, 2008
Racism At Work?
By Peter Brimelow
National Review, April 12,
1993
Everyone has heard of neoconservatism and
neoliberalism, but the real issue in America today is
neosocialism. Classical socialism called for direct
state ownership of the means of production,
distribution, and exchange. Neosocialism just aims at
political control. Socialism claimed to be more
efficient. Neosocialism claims to be more equitable.
Above all, neosocialism professes to combat "racism,"
since this magic word cows all opposition. Apparent
neosocialist objective of the season: commandeering the
banking system and forcing it to subsidize key client
constituencies.
And it's not going to be easy to stop. Late last
year, the Wall Street Journal's news pages
carried five campaigning stories in eight weeks alleging
that residential mortgage lenders were discriminating
against minorities. The Journal's evidence, raw
rejection rates, was essentially worthless because it
took no account of standard credit considerations like
net worth and income. But then the Journal
reported a Federal Reserve Bank of Boston study of a
sample of mortgage applications that did correct for
these criteria. And it found minorities were still
rejected at a (slightly) higher rate. This difference,
the Boston Fed concluded, could only be due to racism. [Mortgage
lending in Boston: Interpreting HMDA data (Working
Paper 92-7)]
The ecstasy that greeted this conclusion ("Definitive—changes
the landscape," claimed the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency) was always absurd. The
Boston Fed study itself noted that rejected minority
applications on average had "poorer objective
qualifications" so that "a systematic bias in
mortgage lending is very difficult to document." For
that matter, Asian-Americans were rejected less
often than whites.
At Forbes, Leslie Spencer and I got interested
in a conspicuous omission from all these
mortgage-discrimination stories: default rates. Had the
Boston Fed study corrected for those?
Ah yes, said
Alicia Munnell, then the Boston Fed's Research
Director. Not of course in the study's sample, which was
too recent, but by looking at default rates in black and
white Census tracts. And they were equal.
Miss Munnell apparently assumed this meant blacks and
whites were equal credit risks. But it didn't. Those
black mortgage holders were, by definition, the ones who
had already passed the mortgage approval process--which
had presumably rejected the usual higher proportion of
blacks on the way. Instead, the fact that black and
white default rates were equal meant that the market was
working. Mortgage lenders were somehow able to weed out
the extra black credit risks, reducing defaults down to
the same, apparently acceptable, rate as for whites.
"[That] is a sophisticated point," Miss
Munnell told us. Our impression was she just hadn't
thought of it. "I do believe discrimination occurs,"
she said. But she now readily conceded, "I do not
have evidence ... no one has evidence."[The
Hidden Clue, Forbes, January 4, 1993]
They don't have evidence, but they sure have
convictions. Our report of the Boston Fed study's fatal
flaw appeared before Christmas. Perhaps the Associated
Press's Rob Wells was too seasonally merry to adjust his
version of Boston Fed ecstasy that appeared December 27.
But this hardly applies to the Wall Street Journal's
Albert R. Karr and John R. Wilke, or the New York
Times's
John H. Cushman, whose uncritical stories appeared
on February 26 and March 7 respectively. Only the fact
that Miss Munnell was nominated for a Treasury job, and
syndicated columns by
Llewellyn Rockwell and
Paul Craig Roberts, saved our story from the memory
hole.
Forbes did receive a letter from one Stephen
M. Cross, deputy controller for compliance management,
comptroller of the currency. Significantly, Cross made
no effort to defend the claim that the Boston Fed study
proved discrimination. Instead, he fell back to the
position that we hadn't proved it didn't exist.
And he offered this fantastic rationalization: Racism
may be preventing qualified blacks from getting
mortgages, tending to lower their default rate. But
simultaneously, it may be causing premature foreclosure
on black mortgage holders, tending to raise their
default rate. The two forces may miraculously balance
out. Which would result in a black default rate equal to
that of whites.
This is indeed logically possible. It is also
logically possible that the equal default rate is caused
by green goblins stealing blacks' application forms.
With a little imaginative effort of this sort, it will
always be possible to allege racism.
Actually, of course, Miss Spencer and I never claimed
to show that mortgage discrimination did not exist. We
merely said the Boston Fed had failed to prove that it
did. But Cross and his ilk do have this problem: The
hypothesis that racism does not affect mortgage lending
yields a prediction--equal default rates. This turns out
to be true. Their alternative hypothesis, that racism is
at work, implies unequal default rates. This turns out
to be false. The racism hypothesis can only be sustained
by ridiculous rationalizations. Accordingly, the
presumption of normal scientific inquiry would be
against it.
Neosocialism, however, is not science. What's going
on here is a witch-hunt, conducted by the religious Left
and aided by key elements of the civil service. The
innocent victims will be the banking system, the savers
of America, the economy, and ultimately liberty itself.
The craven banking industry cannot be expected to
resist. It is time conservatives stopped piously
chanting about capital-gains tax cuts and woke up to the
fact that their capital is under attack.
Mr. Brimelow, an NR
contributing editor, is a senior editor at Forbes.