THE GRAND FALLACY
Thomas Sowell
A
record-breaking new class-action lawsuit against Wal-Mart claims that
this retail chain discriminates against women, for which of course vast
millions of dollars are being demanded. The New York Times aptly
summarized the case -- "about 65 percent of the company's hourly-paid
workers are women, but only 33 percent of its managers are."
The
grand fallacy of our times is that various groups would be equally
represented in institutions and occupations if it were not for
discrimination. This preconception has undermined, if not destroyed,
the crucial centuries-old legal principle that the burden of proof is
on the accuser.
Wal-Mart
is only the latest in a long series of employers who have been hit with
charges of discrimination on the basis of statistical differences among
members of their workforce -- differences between women and men in this
case.
Back
during the 1980s a similar charge was brought against Sears, even
though no one could find a
single woman in all
the hundreds of Sears stores who had been discriminated against -- just
numbers that were different as between women and men.
When you
broke down the numbers, it turned out that women were not equally
represented among people who sold automotive equipment or construction
materials. It also turned out that many women had no interest in
selling automotive equipment or construction materials, and had turned
down opportunities to do so.
In many
other situations, women
have avoided jobs that demand such long hours of work,
or so much travel, that it would make taking care of
their children virtually impossible. The biggest difference in income
is between married women and everyone else. Women who never married
have long held their own economically.
The most
blatant fact about male-female differences is often ignored by those on
the hunt for discrimination: Women have babies.
That usually means
interruptions in career and
different choices of careers beforehand, because some occupations can
stand interruptions better than others.
It is
hardly surprising that women work part-time more often than men, drop
out of the labor force more often than men, specialize in a different
mix of jobs, and major in a different mix of subjects in college and
postgraduate education.
Seldom
are the data sufficiently detailed to permit comparisons of women and
men who are the same on all the variables that matter. But the more
detailed the data, the higher is a woman's income relative to that of a
comparable man, sometimes surpassing that of men.
Male-female
differences in incomes and occupations rose or fell throughout the 20th
century as women's age of marriage and childbearing rose and fell. But
such mundane facts carry little weight with lawyers or social crusaders
on the hunt for discrimination.
Once a
lawsuit is under way, the pressure is on the accused employer to
settle, rather than risk bad publicity that could hurt profits. And,
once they settle, that is taken as proof of guilt, no matter what
anybody says. People without the slightest knowledge of economics or
the slightest experience running a business will boldly assert that
women are paid only 75 percent -- or some other percent -- of what men
make for doing exactly the same work.
Think
about it. If an employer could hire four women for the price of hiring
three men, why would he ever hire men at all?
Even if
the employer was the world's biggest sexist, he could still not survive
in business if his competitors were getting one-third more output from
their employees for the same money.
Sheer
dogmatic repetition has pounded into our minds
the
notion that all groups have similar capabilities, when in fact they do
not necessarily have even the same interest in developing the same
capabilities.
Potential
may be the same but developed capabilities depend on a lot more,
including interest and circumstances. Yet those who start with the
preconception of equal capabilities are quick to seize upon numbers
showing group differences in results as proof that someone else has
done something wrong. That is the grand fallacy of our time.
Townhall.com, Creators
Syndicate, Inc., July 22, 2004
Newsletter, September 2004-Text