Part 7: Analysis -- Immigration and welfare
By STEVE SAILER, UPI National Correspondent
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 (Part 7 of UPI's 14-part series on immigration)

 The beggars on a street in Moscow unwittingly played a part in a study
bearing on some of the most urgent questions in the social sciences. Are
ethnically diverse societies less generous to the poor? Does immigration
undermine support for welfare programs by increasing diversity?

 The question is overlooked but important as the nation debates how to deal
with estimated 9 million illegal aliens in the United States, and the
millions more struggling to make their way here at almost any cost.

 Some of the Moscow panhandlers were Russians, just like the vast majority
of the pedestrians. Others were dressed in the distinctive garb of Moldova,
a small former Soviet republic that gained independence in 1991. Finally,
some of the beggars were darker-skinned Gypsies (also known as Roma), who
are visibly of South Asian origin.

 Unbeknownst to them, the beggars were being monitored by a team of
ethologists (students of the science of behavior). They were led by Frank K.
Salter, an Australian political scientist at the Max Planck Institute in
Germany, and Marina Butovskaya of the Russian State University for
Humanities, who may be Russia's most prominent human ethologist.

 The researchers counted each time a passerby gave money to a beggar. A
pattern soon emerged. The Russian pedestrians preferred to give to their
fellow Russians, with the Moldavians, their fellow Eastern Europeans, as
their second choice. The Asiatic Gypsies were so unpopular that they had to
resort to a wide variety of tactics to scrounge spare change, ranging from
singing and dancing, to importuning tightwads, to dressing up their children
in crutches and eye-patches.

 The huge United Way charity of America seldom capers for alms on street
corners, yet a similar human tendency to give more to the needy when they
are members of one's race has been observed among its donors, too.

 Salter said, "The more homogenous a county, the more they gave to the
United Way."

 Further, the generosity of the welfare programs in democratic countries is
significantly correlated with ethnic homogeneity.

 Salter has edited for publication in 2002 a book titled "Welfare,
Ethnicity, & Altruism: New Data & Evolutionary Theory" (Frank Cass
Publishers). In it, 16 academics discuss the growing evidence that diversity
and compassion don't mix.

 For example, the welfare state originated and still flourishes best in the
highly homogenous lands of North Central Europe. Chancellor Otto von
Bismarck invented modern social programs in late 19th century Germany. Since
then, the spiritual home of the welfare state has become Scandinavia.

 Among Nordic peoples, welfare programs might be most popular of all in
Iceland, which has had no significant immigration in about 1,000 years.

 Icelanders are so genetically homogenous that deCODE Genetics has chosen
Iceland as the perfect place to look for disease-causing genetic mutations,
as there is so little random variation in Icelanders' genomes to confuse the
search. Genealogist Fridrik Skulason, head of the project to create the
Icelandic national family tree, estimates that two random Icelanders would
be, on average, sixth or seventh cousins to each other.

 In contrast, the United States has always had a large non-white population
and has frequently had a high proportion of immigrants. It has also
traditionally offered the lowest welfare payment levels of any rich
democracy.  Interestingly, most American social programs came into existence
during the long period from 1924 to 1968 when immigration was largely shut
off.

 While transfer payments to the elderly remain popular in America, welfare
payments to the poor, who tend to be minorities, were allowed to decline in
real terms through most of the last quarter of the 20th century. This
culminated in 1996 when Aid to Families with Dependent Children was
radically reduced.

 In an interview this summer at a human ethology conference that he and
Butovskaya organized in Moscow, Salter argued that while the specific
history of race relations in the United States played a role in the 1996
welfare reform, "Blaming welfare cutbacks in the United States on white
opposition to blacks doesn't explain the global correlation."

 Switzerland, with three major ethnic groups (German, French, and Italian),
makes an interesting test case. Overall welfare payments are lower in
Switzerland than in most European countries, especially the neighboring
Alpine state of Austria, which might seem similar, but is highly homogenous
ethnically.

 Interestingly, homogenous states also tend to give more foreign aid.
Denmark is the biggest giver in the world on a per capita basis, while the
United States is far down the list. Perhaps, generalizing from their own
satisfactory experience with transfer payments at home, they tend to be more
trusting than Americans that foreign welfare will be well spent by the
recipients.

 According to Salter, "Ethnic solidarity is due to individuals conceiving
of their ethnic groups as extended families." He argued, "As ethnic
heterogeneity increases, society resembles less and less an extended family
due to accumulating cultural and racial differences. As a result, public
altruism declines across the society as a whole, but survives within ethnic
groups."

 This may seem highly esoteric, but Salter's perspective has some highly
down-to-earth implications for the popularity of welfare -- and how
attitudes toward it might change as immigration increases and the United
States becomes ever more diverse.

 In the United States, for example, blacks are more likely than whites to
have close relatives who would qualify for welfare. Not surprisingly, blacks
tend to favor welfare more than whites, who often see welfare as a giveaway
to people unrelated to them.

 In Iceland, by contrast, welfare payments to the poor are generally viewed
as favorably as Medicare entitlements for the elderly are in the United
States.

 Icelandic voters see poverty assistance as a safety net that could help
anybody's extended family at some point.

 Salter argued, "The liberal left supports generous welfare but also
policies that add to ethnic heterogeneity, such as high levels of
immigration. It does not seem to have occurred to them that they must choose
between maximizing the two."

--
Copyright 2001 by United Press International.
All rights reserved.
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