Inequality: The Immigration Dimension
by Steve Sailer
Near Monument Valley, site of so many John
Wayne westerns, the borders of Arizona, New
Mexico, Utah, and Colorado come together at Four
Corners. These adjoining states all share
similar mountains and deserts. Yet the southern
tier of Arizona and New Mexico displays
practically Latin American levels of income
inequality, while the northern tier of Utah and
Colorado are almost Scandinavian in their
economic egalitarianism.
The seldom-remarked links between economic
equality (Liberals Like) and ethnic homogeneity
(Liberals No Like) are made clear by the data
displayed in a recent study (http://www.cbpp.org/1-18-00sfp.htm)
by two left-of-center think tanks, the Economic
Policy Institute and the Center on Budget and
Policy Priorities. For all 50 states, they
divided the average household income of the top
20% of the population to that of the bottom 20%.
Utah is the most equal state in the union, with
Colorado fifth. In contrast, Arizona and New
Mexico are 48th and 49th.
Distance from Mexico appears to be the
determining factor. According to Census Bureau
projections for the year 2000, Hispanics make up
about 29% of the combined population of the two
states adjoining Mexico, versus only 12% of the
two northern states. (Total minorities make up
about 42% of Arizona and New Mexico's
population, versus only 19% of Utah and
Colorado's.)
And this pattern will only grow more
distinct, since per capita legal immigration
from Mexico to the two southerly states was
running 165% higher than to their northern
neighbors. (No estimate was available on illegal
immigration, but Arizona has become notorious
for the porousness of its border, as Pat
Buchanan recently demonstrated by strolling back
and forth across the Arizona-Mexico border
unaccosted.)
This pattern of the whitest states being the
most equal is seen across the land. The rest of
the Egalitarian Top Twelve consists of Indiana,
Iowa, North Dakota, Alaska, Maine, Wisconsin,
Wyoming, Nebraska, Vermont, and Idaho. In
pointed contrast, the most Brazilian states are
primarily those with the most Hispanic
immigrants. Besides Arizona and New Mexico, the
most Latin American-like states include New York
(50th most equal), California (46th), and Texas
(44th). These immigrant destination states tend
to be even more unequal than the Old South
states with large numbers of rural blacks.
Apparently, states like New York, Arizona,
California, and Texas are exacerbating their
inequality both by importing poor foreigners and
by impoverishing their underskilled, native-born
citizens with more wage competition for the
lousiest jobs.
Another way to look at this issue is to not
worry about relative inequality, but to just
consider the income of the lowest 20%.
Personally, it's fine with me if the rich get
richer, but it's the poor getting poorer part
I'm not crazy about.
In the Four Corners states, the impact of
ethnic diversity is obvious. The poorest poor in
the country are in New Mexico, where the average
income of the bottom fifth is only $8,700. The
quite expensive state of Arizona, spiritual home
of the $150 golf greens fee, has the eighth
poorest poor people in America at $10,800. (But
at least they make more than the bottom rung in
immensely costly New York). In contrast, the
wealthiest bottom fifth is in Colorado where
they average $18,500 per year. Probably even
more impressive, however, is the $18,200 average
in Utah, since its cost of living is quite low.
Now, it's important to note that the
Hispanics of New Mexico are by no means all
recent immigrants: the conquistadors founded
Santa Fe in 1609. Their descendants have been
part of the U.S. since 1848. And these Hispanics
have exerted more political power and for longer
than Hispanics in any other state. For example,
one of the two statues representing New Mexico
in the Capitol Rotunda is of a Hispanic grandee
who served as U.S. Senator from New Mexico for
much of the first half of the 20th century.
Nonetheless, the Mexican-Americans of New
Mexico have yet to assimilate well. An
Albuquerque rocket scientist asks, "Does
this tell us anything about how likely Hispanics
in general are to catch up academically and
economically with people of North European
descent? Yes, indeed. It never has to happen at
all, and even if it does, it might take more
than 150 years."
New Mexico's population has increasingly
split into an overclass of Santa Fe's glitterati
and Los Alamos' H-bomb designers, whose lawns
are mowed and children baby-sat by a Mexican
lowerclass, who are sullenly watched by an
impoverished and alcoholic Native American
underclass. It's not a pretty sight, but it
might be the future of the U.S., with
native-born African-Americans playing the
underclass role in most localities.
This obvious correlation between immigration
and inequality is little remarked upon in the
press, for various reasons. One big one is that
polite society has decreed that since Equality
and Diversity are both Good Things, they must
therefore be synonyms rather than what they are:
antonyms.
[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.]