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David Brooks, Yet Again

27 Jul 2007 10:12 am

In the course of a multi-post assault on David Brooks' column on neo-populism, Ezra Klein writes:

Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam are always telling me to cut David Brooks more slack, to extend the assumption of good faith, to listen to the interesting things he has to say. So I'd really like one of them to dissolve my current impression that Brooks' latest column -- which tries to make the argument that the economy really is in very good shape, save for some issues with inequality -- isn't a pack of lies and deceptions.

I don't know about "pack," since much of what Brooks has to say I agree with: The Hacker thesis about rising income volatility seems increasingly dubious; globalization has brought a host of benefits to middle-class Americans, in terms of lower prices and greater diversity of goods, that don't show up in wage growth figures; much of the growth in income inequality is the result of trends like performance pay, longer hours for upper-income workers, and the increasing value of major corporations, none of which are amenable to easy policy fixes; tax revenues are higher and the deficit is in better shape than most liberals predicted a few years ago; and so forth.

But yes, the first two assertions Brooks makes in his column are technically correct but misleading, and if Ezra thinks that makes him a liar than I doubt there's anything I can do to disabuse him of the notion. While critiquing the doom and gloom of the neopopulists, Brooks cites rising incomes for poor families over the last twenty-five years without noting that they've stagnated or fallen in the last five; he cites wage growth figures from last year without noting that they're down in the first six months of this year; and he uses "average" wages rather than "median" wages, when the latter tends to be a better tool for assessing how the typical worker is doing. Tyler Cowen mounts a defense of the latter two points here, noting, among other things, that the "average wage" measure in question excludes management-level wages (including the skyrocketing CEO salaries that can skew averages upward) and is therefore a more solid metric than Brooks' opponents argue. But overall, I think the liberal critics are right, and Brooks' use of the data in these two examples deserves criticism and correction.

Whether that justifies calling him a "liar," or whether it might be more appropriate to treat him the way I would assume Ezra would like to be treated himself - as a fallible pundit who is sometimes insufficiently skeptical about information that dovetails with his preconceptions, and who merits respectful disagreement in such cases rather sneering and name-calling - well, make up your own mind. I'm done arguing about David Brooks. I think he's an excellent columnist; I think his body of work speaks for itself; I think that liberals who demand that the Times sack him every time he gets a piece of data wrong or attacks a straw man or commits one of the hundreds of venial sins that every columnist commits (yes, even Paul Krugman) should get a grip. And that's where I'll leave it.

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Comments (16)

After all, this is the conservative position - that conservative columnists deserve jobs for life. Being a conservative columnist means never having to say you're sorry, even when you've been an unblinking Girl Friday for war criminals for years on end as Brooks has been.

Another thing you might consider is Brooks's argument that higher wage earners work more than bottom dwellers and therefore the discrepancy is justified. The problem, obviously, is that lower income workers often get paid by the hour and not by salary, and thus usually have their hours controlled in order to keep their incomes down and even keep them from the benefits of "full time" workers - like healthcare.
I guess the whole Horatio Alger narrative is a bit disturbed by this by I think (I don't know) that this unsettles things a little bit.
Not that you want to keep talking about it.

I think his body of work speaks for itself;

Well, there's a point of agreement, at least.

I went through some of the other instances where [Brooks] made declarations that appeared insupportable. He accused me of being "too pedantic," of "taking all of this too literally," of "taking a joke and distorting it." "That’s totally unethical," he said.
How long did he work for the WSJ editorial page, again?

much of the growth in income inequality is the result of trends like performance pay, longer hours for upper-income workers, and the increasing value of major corporations, none of which are amenable to easy policy fixes;

We can't cure the cause, but we can treat the symptom simply enough by redistributing money. Maybe we shouldn't, but we could.

...thus leading to lower performance, less hours worked, and decreasing values for major corporations. Theoretically.

thus leading to lower performance, less hours worked, and decreasing values for major corporations. Theoretically.

According to some theory, but by no means the default theory. The fact that performance pay, longer hours, and increasing corporate values are causing inequality DOES NOT imply some sort of cyclic causality where alleviating the inequality eliminates the original causes.

You can come up with theories where that would happen and theories where it wouldn't, but you have to actually propose some kind of theory.

Brooks is a smart guy, and I am probably more of a "globalist" than he is, but I don't trust him at all. When his back is up against the wall, he can be more unscrupulous than Bill Kristol and Charles Krauthammer combined. He has a well-earned knack for writing the sort of witty social commentary that bicoastal, upper-middle-class types enjoy. They get it, and the rubes don't. When his "witty" piece on the innocent, four-square folks of rural Pennsylvania was exploded by a smart young reporter, he resorted to pathetic, "you'll never work in this town again" threats. If only that were true of Dave!

Hey, Brooks writes for the New York Times! Surely you commies believe EVERY word you read in that rag.

Brooks is indeed a smart guy and has shrewd, if arguable insights into political culture and cultural politics. But he's consistently empirically wrong about economic matters--competent, professional economists, or excellent auto-didacts like Ezra rip him to shreds, time after time. He consistently misuses statistics or distorts their findings in a fundamental way. And note that Ezra's posting has a link embedded within it that criticizes an earlier Brook's column along precisely the same lines--misuse of the data.

Your comparison to Ezra doesn't work because, to my knowledge, no serious interlocutor has challenged Ezra's use of the tools of the trade: interpeting empirical data to support his arguments. It's one thing to argue against government supported or funded health care--it's another thing to say that Ezra distorts the data that underscores his advocacy of government supported health care.

That's Brook's problem--he misuses economic data. When he stops doing that, liberals will stop having such sneering contempt for him.

Ross,

It is not that he has once done this, it is that he does this over and over. I don't have the times select - it is not worth it to me, but I read enough blogs to know that this guy makes assertions that "are technically correct but misleading" in every economic column that he does. When you do it once or twice, its a mistake. When you do it for years everytime you write an economic column, it makes you a liar, just like Ezra said he was.

I know you are a conservative, and I can respect that. Do not bend over backwards to make excuses for serial liars and propagandists.

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