Science 2.0
 
 
 
Genoeconomics: Is Our Financial  Future 
in Our  Chromosomes?
 
By _Jon Entine_ (http://www.science20.com/profile/jon_entine)  | October 
14th  2012

 
A new phase in the Gene Wars is about to begin—this time focused on the  
nexus of genetics and economics.  
Nature carried a _provocative  article_ 
(http://www.nature.com/news/economics-and-genetics-meet-in-uneasy-union-1.11565)
  last week laying the ground 
work for what should be a fiery debate  over the nascent field of 
genoeconomics. The prestigious  American Economic Review is set to publish a 
peer 
reviewed paper  co-authored by two economists, Quamrul Ashraf and Oded Galor, 
that argues that a  country’s economic well being could be linked to the 
population’s genetic  make-up. _Earlier  versions of the article_ 
(http://ideas.repec.org/p/bro/econwp/2010-7.html)  have been available on the 
web for a few 
years, and  it’s already stirred quite a controversy.
 
According to _Nature_ 
(http://www.nature.com/news/economics-and-genetics-meet-in-uneasy-union-1.11565)
 :  “The paper argues that there are strong links 
between estimates of genetic  diversity for 145 countries and per-capita 
incomes, even after accounting for  myriad factors such as economic-based 
migration. High genetic diversity in a  country’s population is linked with 
greater innovation, the paper says, because  diverse populations have a greater 
range of cognitive abilities and styles. By  contrast, low genetic diversity 
tends to produce societies with greater  interpersonal trust, because there 
are fewer differences between populations.  Countries with intermediate 
levels of diversity, such as the United States,  balance these factors and have 
the most productive economies as a result, the  economists conclude.” 
The term “genoeconomics” was coined only a few years ago. Spurred by  
groundbreaking public policy and social and economic research at the University 
 
of Chicago over the past two decades, economists have been expanding their  
wings, exploring the role of economic factors in our culture. The subject 
became  mainstream after the bestselling success in 2005 of _Freakonomics_ 
(http://www.freakonomics.com/) : A Rogue  Economist Explores the Hidden Side 
of Everything by _UC_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Chicago)  
_economist_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economist)  _Steven Levitt_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Levitt)  and _New York Times_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Times)   _journalist_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalist)  _Stephen Dubner_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_J._Dubner) . Within  a few years, 
economists began turning their sites on the 
intersection of  genetics and economics. 
In May, the Boston Globe ran a fascinating piece, _In  Search of the Money 
Gene,_ 
(http://articles.boston.com/2012-05-13/ideas/31654035_1_rabbit-hole-economists-gene)
  featuring some of the young pioneers, Phillip  Koellinger, 
now a professor at Erasmus college, then a MIT student but now a  professor 
at New York University. Within a few years, a plethora of the best and  the 
brightest in economics had jumped into the field—and the fray.
 
 
Their basic premise—which is incontestable in its most superficial form—is 
 that genetics underlies many of the things, like risk-taking, patience and 
 generosity that society has traditionally assumed are shaped totally by 
social  and environmental factors. The challenge is to what degree scientists 
can tease  out these genetic factors and what patterns might be found in 
various genetic  groups, such as by sex or countries or ethnic and religious 
populations.  Clearly, it’s potentially explosive stuff.  
Leon Neyfakh in the Globe traces the movement—that’s what it has  already 
become—to 1976, when the late University of Pennsylvania economist Paul  
Taubman published the results of a study in which he followed the financial  
lives of identical twins. The congruence in their “economic lives”—even in 
cases  in which identical twins had been separated and raised in different 
cultural  situations—was striking. Taubman estimated that between 18 percent 
and 41  percent of variation in income across individuals was heritable. 
Spurred by the  completion of the Human Genome Project in 2000 and the budding 
of 
the field of  neuroeconomics (the study of how economic decision-making 
functioned inside a  person’s brain), the groundwork was laid for the 
_emergence of  genoeconomics_ 
(http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=11939&page=304) . 
It’s fascinating and controversial research. “I’m really worried that if  
[tracing behaviors to genes] should become possible, it may lead to a lot of 
 things that we don’t want,” Neyfakh quotes Koellinger as saying. “I very 
firmly  believe that information about your genetic makeup is probably the 
most private  thing you could possibly have, and there should be extremely 
tight protections  to make sure that no one gets their hands on this data 
unless you as an  individual explicitly want this.” 
No wonder that Ashraf and Galor’s paper is already prompting out-cries from 
 the “we shouldn’t be discussing such things” crowd. The digital ink is 
not even  dry and yet the authors are facing charges of genetic determinism 
and racism.  Geneticist David Reich of Harvard Medical School in Boston, 
Harvard University  paleoanthropologist Daniel Lieberman and more than a dozen 
other Harvard  professors have written an _open  letter_ 
(http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2155060&http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm
?abstract_id=2155060)  highly critical of the paper and decrying its 
potential for mischief:  “[T]he suggestion that an ideal level of genetic 
variation could foster economic  growth and could even be engineered has the 
potential to be misused with  frightening consequences to justify indefensible 
practices such as ethnic  cleansing or genocide,” the letter said. 
The reaction comes across as overheated. The paper had in fact been peer  
reviewed by economists and biologists and is not presented as definitive. 
Ashraf  and Oder make a point of noting that they are merely using genetics as 
a proxy  for other factors that can drive an economy, such as history and 
culture, so  charges of determinism appear misplaced, serving mostly to raise 
the threat of  soft censorship. 
A taboo invariably emerges when the nexus of genetics and behavior are  
discussed. It was almost impossible to have a reasoned discussion about _The 
Bell Curve_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bell_Curve)  or either  of my 
two popular books on population genetics: _Taboo:  Why Black Athletes Dominate 
Sports and Why We’re Afraid to Talk_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Taboo-Athletes-Dominate-Sports-Afraid/dp/158648026X/ref=pd_sim_b_32)
   About It and _Abraham
’s  Children: Race, Identity and the DNA of the Chosen People_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Abrahams-Children-Identity-Chosen-People/dp/0446580635) 
. 
This is not an endorsement of this latest salvo in the ‘gene wars’ debate. 
It  is a reminder that genetics is opening wide new doors of inquiry. It 
would be  dangerous to close them based on concerns the previous inquiries 
into human  differences have been misused. As we never know where new advances 
in science  will originate we’re far better served by vigorous debate. Let’
s hope more  researchers pursue this subject and with even more intellectual 
rigor—and their  work is welcomed as a appropriate subject for debate and  
discussion.

-- 
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