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  • PAUL JAY: Welcome to this week's edition of The Bill Black Financial and Fraud Report.

  • I'm Paul Jay. This is The Real News Network.

  • And now joining us from Kansas City, Missouri, is Bill Black, where he's an associate professor

  • of economics and law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. He's a white-collar

  • criminologist, a former financial regulator, and author of the book The Best Way to Rob

  • a Bank Is to Own One.

  • Thanks for joining us again, Bill.

  • BILL BLACK: Thank you.

  • JAY: So what have you been thinking about, working on this week?

  • BLACK: Well, this week has had two studies come out on the gender wage gap. And they

  • both look at only one portion of that wage gap. And so I've been thinking about this

  • and channeling to some fair extent my spouse's work and her coauthor, Naomi Cahn's. This

  • is June Carbone and Naomi Cahn.

  • The general thing is that the gender wage gap overall over the last, say, 30 years has

  • shrunk. But most of that so-called improvement doesn't come so much from women who are relatively

  • less wealthy doing fabulously in terms of income; it comes from the fact that men in

  • lower income brackets are doing horrifically. They've just fallen off the cliff over the

  • last 30 years or so. And so the gender wage gap has fallen, but it's not exactly something

  • that anybody wants to celebrate.

  • Meanwhile, the gap in gender has actually grown and grown substantially for people that

  • have college degrees and beyond. And what's going on here, I think, is two aspects of

  • the same overall phenomenon, and that is the enormous rise of finance in the United States

  • and in much of the world.

  • So finance, which is just supposed to be this kind of pretty small middle-man activity,

  • is now back up to record levels it was at before the crisis of having 40 percent of

  • the total corporate profits in America, roughly. Now, that's terrible news, to begin with,

  • for the economy, because you don't want the middlemen to get rich; you want the productive

  • people to be getting rich, and the middlemen are supposed to just be helping them get the

  • money to be productive. Instead, they're obviously, you know, functioning largely like parasites

  • under the modern system.

  • But it is finance that is largely driving the push for globalization, which is a word

  • that means many things to many different people, but in this context I'm talking about the

  • race to the bottom in terms of wages. And I mean wages as opposed to salaries, typically,

  • but sometimes salaries as well.

  • And so what we're seeing is--and this first study, which was by Third Way, which is this

  • group that pretends sometimes to be center-left but is actually completely a creation of Wall

  • Street--it's run by Wall Street for Wall Street with this false flag operation as if it were

  • a center-left group. It's nothing of the sort. Well, they hired an economist to do a study

  • about the gender gap, and they ballyhooed it as, hey, good news, the gender gap is falling.

  • Then you have to actually read the study to see that, well, no, it's actually bad news.

  • It's what's happening to males.

  • And then their spin on the story--remember, this is supposedly a center-left group--is,

  • see, the Democrats are wrong in concentrating on jobs and employment; this is really a cultural

  • matter. So that was the spin put on this study.

  • And I did quite a piece on the Third Way exposing this and the fact that it really is economics.

  • It's the economics of change, and to some extent the wave of incarceration of African

  • Americans, but basically these two things coming together to devastate the working class

  • in the United States. So yet again it's finance largely driving it on the bottom of the income

  • distribution.

  • But it turns out it's also finance driving the ever-expanding gender gap at the top of

  • the income distribution. So the American Association of University Women have just come out with

  • a study on what's behind the gender gap, and they showed that upon graduation it's already

  • significant. There's a 20 percent differential simply as men and women come out of university.

  • But after that, as they get more experience, the gender gap widens.

  • JAY: Now, Bill, is this particular to people working in the finance sector? Or it's throughout

  • corporate America?

  • BLACK: It's in general happening in many sectors. It's not happening throughout corporate America.

  • It's happening in the most elite institutions in terms of compensation. So it's happening

  • in the most elite doctors, and it's happening mostly in finance.

  • And, again, finance is so large as the elite of the elite of the elite. This isn't even

  • the 1 percent we're talking about; this is the 0.001 percent in some cases. You see that

  • gender inequality has exploded in these areas. And, of course, overall inequality has exploded

  • in these areas.

  • And what's particularly fun is that there was a third study that came out in this same

  • week, and this third study says, you know what, actually, women make far better senior

  • managers than men, that if there's no woman on the board of directors, there's a 20 percent

  • increased chance that a corporation will go into bankruptcy.

  • JAY: I'm not sure why it would apply to doctors, but in finance I could offer a theory. This

  • is of course just a speculation. But at any rate, there was a study done of the Vancouver

  • stock exchange by a doctor Elliott Barker, who had developed this criteria for deciding

  • or measuring, judging whether someone has a sociopathic personality or not and found--I

  • think it was--the number was extraordinary--more than half--I think it was almost 60 percent

  • of the Vancouver Stock Exchange measured in the sociopathic area. And maybe if men do--a

  • higher percentage of men do tend to be sociopaths, and maybe sociopaths do better in finance.

  • So maybe that would--may be why they want to hire more men.

  • BLACK: Well, they don't do better. They do worse. They cause massively greater losses.

  • But they get higher incomes and they get promotions. That's the terrible thing, right?

  • JAY: Well, do better in terms of the criteria of management that are going to share in the

  • short-term spoils.

  • BLACK: That's right. They follow strategies. And that's actually the fourth study. So the

  • fourth study I've alluded to before is by--but, again, it's very recent. It's by conservative

  • finance professors, and it finds that at our most reputable, quote-unquote, banks, fraud

  • was pervasive and that the banks made a ton of money through their fraud for the officers--not

  • for the banks, of course. And so all of these things come together.

  • You are correct that when we look at senior executives throughout industry, we do find

  • that there's an unusually heavy percentage in the senior leadership of sociopaths. Now,

  • that's still a relatively small number. So I'm not familiar with the Vancouver Stock

  • Exchange.

  • But yes, most people have the sense that finance gets the worst of the worst personality types.

  • And in terms of the gender gap, it is one of the areas throughout the elite world which

  • is the most viciously sexist. And so this the studies and the lawsuits show, and of

  • course the expose books, like Liar's Poker and such, help reveal just how nasty these

  • entities are towards women.

  • But it turns out, if we flip it around, of course, we have a potential win-win-win. If

  • we reduce the gender disparities, which are enormous in the upper ranks of finance, by

  • bringing many more women in, we get fewer sociopaths, we get fewer folks with extreme

  • narcissism, we get increased altruism--and there's another new study that says the way

  • to be a better manager is to help people. Well, that's altruism at its extreme and such.

  • And we get better decisions, right, less fraud, better investment decisions, so that the economy

  • tends to grow and be more stable. So what we have is modern finance is driving both

  • aspects of gender inequality, and of course over [crosstalk]

  • JAY: And it's a very deliberate thing. I've talked to people that go to work in finance,

  • and there is a kind of a boot camp approach, I mean, military style boot camp approach,

  • like night after night of sleep deprivation and crazy amounts of work thrown at people

  • in order to prove they can make it to the higher echelons. And it's kind of weeding

  • out anybody with any kind of normal human sensibilities about things, and if you're

  • not absolutely totally committed to making the maximum amount of money and you don't

  • care about your family or anything else, if you're not that kind of person, you're not

  • likely to rise in those organizations. And it's a very deliberate filtering, as people

  • rise to the top, for certain kind of personality types.

  • BLACK: And that's the good organizations, because you also get at the worst organizations

  • exactly that self-selection. So I gave a speech down at Texas once. The people that arranged

  • it took me out to lunch the next day because they were intrigued by something they said.

  • And the guy said, you know, I was the guy that hired in the elite MBA program for Exxon.

  • And he said, it is true that when Enron was at its peak, we lost a number of folks who

  • chose to go to Enron with its higher salaries instead of Exxon. But in a number of cases,

  • I'd get a phone call three months later, six months later, from the guy or gal that went

  • to Enron, asking, is that job still available.

  • In other words, Enron was a pervasive fraud. Anybody in the senior ranks had an open brain

  • knew about it, and the people least comfortable with assisting a fraud tended to get out of

  • those organizations. So over time, the worst organizations--again, this is why it's so

  • scary--at the supposedly most reputable banks in the world, conservative finance scholars

  • have now documented that fraud was, to use their word, pervasive.

  • JAY: Alright. Thanks for joining us, Bill.

  • BLACK: Thank you.

  • JAY: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.

PAUL JAY: Welcome to this week's edition of The Bill Black Financial and Fraud Report.

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男女賃金格差は縮小している-男性の賃金は下がっている (Gender Wage Gap is Shrinking - Male Wages are Going Down)

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    阿多賓 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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