Technology, Immigration: The Gilder Bubble Bursts
[Peter Brimelow writes: In another life, I
write about
investment letters
and am thus in a position to report that a stock
portfolio based on George Gilder’s recommendations would
have lost 92.2% of its value since February 2000,
according to the count kept by the
Hulbert Financial
Digest.
It’s sad, because Gilder is a nice man – and in person
he was curiously undogmatic about immigration. He just
hadn’t thought about it much. All he wanted, he told an
investment conference I was moderating in mid-2000, was
an assured supply of cheap computer programmers – other
than that, he didn’t care. And he thought all immigrants
ought to be able to speak English. At this last remark,
the entire audience of fat cats, obviously uneasy about
our argument, burst into loud applause. There’s hope for
fat cats,
and the immigration debate, yet.]
By
Steve Sailer
"I don't think Internet valuations are crazy, I think
they reflect a fundamental embrace of huge
opportunities. Virtually all forecasts estimate
something like a thousandfold rise in Internet traffic
over the next five years. That means that if you are an
Internet company today, you are dealing with only a
tenth of 1 percent of your potential traffic in just a
couple of years. In 10 years, at this rate, there would
be a millionfold increase."
George Gilder,
Wired Magazine, 9/1999
"Without immigration over the last 50 years, I would
estimate that U.S. real living standards would be at
least 40% lower."
George Gilder,
Wall Street Journal, December 18, 1995
A
few weeks after I took up the then-lonely cause of
criticizing immigration policy in VDARE.COM back in
February of 2000, the NASDAQ index hit 5,132. At the
time, George Gilder enjoyed a more socially acceptable
gig. According to the Wall Street Journal, he was
a man whose
"slightest utterance can move stocks." His
newsletter, the Gilder Technology Report, which specialized
in puffing telecommunications stocks like the now
bankrupt
Global Crossing, pulled in $20 million in annual
revenue.
Gilder personified the telecom and dot.com bubbles –
while contributing more than his share to the
wrong-headed
dominant thinking on immigration. In fact, the two
were related. In
early 2000, when Gilder's technotopia predictions
seemed like solid common-sense, it was very hard to get
anyone to think critically about American immigration
laws. After all, the only way sky-high stock prices
could possibly be justified was if every single U.S.
government policy was perfect - including immigration.
If you're so smart, Sailer, how come you're not rich
like George Gilder? QED.
Well, guess what? The NASDAQ has since fallen over 70%.
Gilder's favorite stocks, the telecoms, lost trillions
in perhaps the biggest wipeout in market history. And
Gilder says he's broke and has a lien on his house. His
ownership of
The American Spectator magazine
has proved too expensive and he has given control back
to R. Emmett Tyrrell.
Gilder
now says, "I knew that it was going to crash, I
really did." Unfortunately, he forgot to mention it in
his newsletter.
Still, I can hardly wish Gilder ill. Although they say
there are no second acts in American life, Gilder has
already lived through about four acts that have been, by
the normally dull standards of public intellectuals, of
particular drama. I can only hope he enjoys a happy
fifth. (Of course, if you had invested your life savings
based on his advice, you might think differently.)
When Gilder’s father was killed in WWII, he became, like
a character in a Victorian novel or in a superhero comic
book, the ward of vastly wealthy banker David
Rockefeller. He started his career as a liberal
Ripon Society Republican, working in Nelson
Rockefeller's campaigns.
But surprisingly for someone from such a genteel
Establishment background, in the 1970's he became one of
the era's most insightful—and thus most
furiously-denounced—writers on sex and race. His
refutations of feminist theory,
Men and Marriage
(originally Sexual Suicide) and
Naked Nomads: Unmarried Men in America,
have stood up exceedingly well over the years.
Charles Murray, whose controversial 1984 book
Losing Ground was the inspiration for the successful welfare
reform law of 1996, has
said,
"I guess I'm a disciple of George Gilder, in many
respects. In 1973, with Sexual Suicide, he set
out, at a time when it was extremely unpopular, a whole
set of propositions about the role that marriage plays
in socializing men and also socializing the next
generation of children. If you have very high rates of
illegitimacy—which is the worst form of single
parenthood —that brings social chaos."
In 1978, Gilder published his masterpiece,
Visible Man: A True Story of Post-Racist America.
It was a semi-novelistic retelling of the year he spent
hanging out with a charming homeboy from the Albany
ghetto who—rendered economically unnecessary by the easy
welfare money available to the women in his life—passed
his days doing nothing much except committing the
occasional felony.
Unfortunately, Visible Man sold only 800 copies
initially - a financial disaster for a man with a big
family to support.
Then, in 1981, Gilder's Wealth
and Poverty became
a surprise best-seller, partly because it was thought to
explain Ronald Reagan’s supply side revolution in
economic policy, a big mystery to America’s political
and intellectual elite. It lifted him from, well,
near-poverty to near wealth.
But with the easy life of the celebrity pundit finally
at hand, Gilder did something strange and even heroic.
He dropped everything to learn science and engineering
so that he could write intelligently about high tech.
(Here's a 1996
profile of Gilder by the fine novelist
Po Bronson.)
Gilder's wonderfully enthusiastic nature and deep faith
(he’s a director of the
Discovery Institute,
one of the leading promoters of Creationist thinking)
combined to make him America's #1 cheerleader for the
technobubble. He became so popular that he was seduced
into starting an investment advisory newsletter, with
catastrophic results.
Gilder cost his subscribers uncounted millions because,
for all his brilliance, his analysis of telecom suffered
from the same blindspot that he and so many others
brought to their pronouncements about the economics of
immigration.
The problem wasn't just Gilder's penchant for making
Unscientific Wild-Ass Guesses disguised as hard facts.
(See the two quotes at the beginning of the article.
Note that Gilder’s Wild-Ass Guess about the net
aggregate benefits of immigration to native-born
Americans was not only offered without any support
evidence whatever, but it actually contradicts a
significant
economic literature that finds the benefits to be nugatory).
No, Gilder’s deepest problem was he just didn't get the
Law of Supply and Demand. In the wonderland of the
New Economy, who needed to study the old dismal science,
economics?
We are repeatedly assured by many who ought to
understand economics – hello, Wall Street Journal
Edit Page - that foreigners, in Gilder's
words, take only "jobs that Americans would not
perform." Yet, as I recall from Econ 101, there is no
such thing as a
job that Americans wouldn't perform. There is always
a
market-clearing wage. It just will never be as low
as the employer, or as high as the worker, would wish.
As numerous
studies have shown, the
economic impact of immigration is largely to shift
wealth from working class Americans to both
immigrants and
wealthier Americans.
Gilder's huge blunder in assessing the stock market
potential of fiber optic companies was not technical. In
fact, he was admirably prescient about just how rapidly
bandwidth technology would increase. No, the problem was
implicit in the title to his 2000 book,
Telecosm: How Infinite Bandwith Will Revolutionize Our
World. While Gilder's mantra of "infinite
bandwidth" was clearly marketing hype, the hypergrowth
in fiber optic capacity over the last decade meant that
infinite bandwidth came a lot closer than just about
anybody other than Gilder had predicted.
But remember Econ 101. Without infinite demand, an
infinite supply of anything equates to a price of zero.
And that's roughly what happened to your telecom stocks.
Egged on by hyper-optimists like Gilder, companies spent
hundreds of billions laying and upgrading fiber optic
cable for long distance Internet bandwidth. But demand
never came close to catching up. Further, competition
was so fierce that none of the telecoms could achieve
the monopoly power that could possibly have justified
the stock price of a single one of them.
Well, that era of delusion is over. And a new era of
realism has begun – both about finance and immigration.
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
August 22, 2002