Culture Diversity Was Supposed to Make Us Rich. Not So Much.


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When management consulting firm McKinsey declared in 2015 that it had found a link between profits and executive racial and gender diversity, it was a breakthrough. The research was used by investors, lobbyists and regulators to push for more women and minority groups on boards, and to justify investing in companies that appointed them.

Unfortunately, the research doesn’t show what everyone thought it showed.

There are obvious benefits of diverse corporate leadership for society, both in providing role models and in showing a commitment to promoting the best people, irrespective of skin color or gender. But doing it because it is the right thing is not the same as doing it because it makes more money.

Since 2015, the approach has been tested in the fire of the marketplace and failed. Academics have tried to repeat McKinsey’s findings and failed, concluding that there is in fact no link between profitability and executive diversity. And the methodology of McKinsey’s early studies, which helped create the widespread belief that diversity is good for profits, is being questioned.

McKinsey has tried to remedy one of the most obvious flaws. It originally linked profits over several years with diversity at the end of the period, meaning the most it could prove is that profitability led to more diversity, not the other way around. In its latest study, it said it had now run the tests using diversity at the start of the period, and still found a correlation.

“In light of a recent study criticizing our methodologies, we have reviewed our research and continue to stand by its findings—that diverse leadership teams are associated with a higher likelihood of financial outperformance,” McKinsey said. “We have also been clear and consistent that our research identifies correlation, not causation, and that those two things are not the same.”

The trouble is that McKinsey behaves as though the studies do show causation, constantly talking of the corporate benefits of diversity.

Even the correlation is in doubt. Academics can’t replicate McKinsey’s study precisely, because it keeps secret the names of the companies it used. But a paper published this year finds that McKinsey’s methodology doesn’t show benefits from diversity for S&P 500 companies for a range of profitability metrics. It isn’t that a lack of diversity is good for profits either, it’s just there’s no link.

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THE ‘FEARLESS GIRL’ STATUE STANDS OUTSIDE THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.

This shouldn’t come as a surprise. If companies could boost their profits as easily as McKinsey suggested—the most-diverse firms had a 39 percentage point higher chance of higher-than-average profit margins than the least-diverse—then surely companies would have rushed to promote more women and minority racial groups.

“It seemed implausible because companies would have jumped on it and the advantages would be competed away,” said John Hand, an accounting professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. With Jeremiah Green of Texas A&M University, he found no results that were statistically significant when repeating McKinsey’s study for the S&P 500. McKinsey keeps secret the names of the companies in its study, which in 2015 included 186 from the U.S. and Canada, so it can’t be independently verified.

This matters, because the McKinsey study was hugely influential. McKinsey’s research figures first in BlackRock’s references for supporting a board diversity target of 30% in its proxy voting guidelines. It featured prominently among studies used by a Securities and Exchange Commission commissioner in 2020 to explain why she supported corporate disclosure of diversity metrics. Nasdaq cited it as evidence when the exchange applied to the SEC for a rule requiring companies it lists to have minimum diversity on boards, or explain why they don’t. It has been cited by dozens of campaign groups pushing for rules to support consideration of social issues by pension funds and others, too.

McKinsey’s influence wasn’t only on policy, which ought anyway to consider moral and societal issues as well as purely financial ones. BlackRock and Refinitiv, now part of the London Stock Exchange Group, cited the study as evidence of financial benefits from diversity when they created an ETF that tracked a diversity index. That index has lagged badly behind since its 2018 launch, returning about 55% against more than 70% for the global index without diversity conditions.

This seems to be less about diversity than the choice of how to invest in it. The ETF is equal-weighted, which has held it back as giant stocks beat the rest of the market. Because of the diversity requirements, it held a lot more banks and insurers, and less technology, than the market as a whole.

A similar fund was created earlier by State Street Global Advisors with the ticker SHE. It was promoted through the “Fearless Girl” statue—briefly installed opposite Wall Street’s bronze bull and now opposite the New York Stock Exchange—and backed by research from MSCI, which claimed a 36% higher return on equity for firms with at least three women on the board, or “strong female leadership.”

A moment’s thought would suggest this was far too high a figure to be explained by the presence of a handful of women, and subsequent deep underperformance shows skepticism was the right response. Since its 2016 launch the fund’s return has lagged more than 70 percentage points behind that of the top 1,000 companies, from which it selected before switching to an MSCI gauge two years ago. It has shrunk from a peak of $400 million to $245 million.

McKinsey said in its original paper that “it stands to reason…that more diverse companies are better able to win top talent, and improve their customer orientation, employee satisfaction, and decision-making, leading to a virtuous cycle of increasing returns.” Common sense also says it’s easier to avoid potentially catastrophic groupthink if people have a range of different experiences.

Common sense also insists that it’s important to build team spirit and trust, where people with a shared background have a head start. University of Chicago law professor Lisa Bernstein showed this for New York’s Jewish diamond dealers, who would score zero for diversity but gained financially by the trust from their common heritage. Similar studies have shown the same for other small ethnic business groups.

Bernstein thinks such trust can be built from networks of social connections, but it comes built-in for some backgrounds.

Skin color and sex don’t perfectly capture diversity of thought, anyway. A privately-educated Black Harvard Business School graduate would probably think much the same way about business as a white one. A top female New York lawyer may have a similar experience of life—or lack of it—as a male one. McKinsey’s diversity of thought suggestions don’t extend to, for example, appointing worker representatives to the board, even though their ideas might well be quite different to those of senior management.

Finally, correlation is not causation! McKinsey repeatedly says in its study that it only found a correlation. The Aztecs mistook correlation for causation with tragic results, cutting out the heart of a victim to rekindle fire every 52 years in order to ensure the world’s survival. There was a strong correlation between the human sacrifice and the world not ending—but no causation.

Investors don’t risk having vital organs removed, but they should pay more attention to the studies they rely on.




We've had a study done earlier this year, this is yet another one.

Nothing we didn't already know - prioritizing anything other than ability leads to a decline in ability. who would have guessed that one?!

Also, it's interesting how McKinsey is now being put into question. Who could be behind those studies...?
 
So now they finally went mask off and said "hey guys, that diversity stuff was just to line our pockets"? Okay, maybe now you can start hiring by merit and not "this candidate is a different skin color/race, hire them"?
 
So just like everyone paying attention thought and warned. Nothing at all behind such claims. Just ideological zeal and dogma.


There are obvious benefits of diverse corporate leadership for society, both in providing role models and in showing a commitment to promoting the best people, irrespective of skin color or gender. But doing it because it is the right thing is not the same as doing it because it makes more money.

So none at all since such things have never ever been shown, let alone proven, to actually have any impact at all on anything. Just like "representation" in fiction and media. Empty, hollow virtue signalling and feel-good wishful thinking.... if even that! More likely simply "it's the current year" nonsense. Something no true believer would ever second guess and something no person with something to lose would ever dare openly question till now. To do so would make one evil scum. Because it sounded so right/nice.
 
So your plan then is to just continue fucking things up for literally everyone but you and yours, same as the rest of your new economic cohort? To turn the rest of the UK into the same booze and heroin shithole as Coatbridge and all those other towns? Kill yourself. I mean that unironically. You'll be doing the world, the UK, and even Scotland itself a huge favor. Take your husband and as many of your friends as you can with you. Put your money where your nihilistic mouth is, you shite-eating Jock. If your mother knew you were going to wind up like this she'd kill you slowly, and she'd be right to, the bitch. This "fuck you, got mine" attitude of yours is everything that's fucking wrong with the world, Tory, Labour, Scots, English, fucking everyone.

Yes, I'm goddamn fucking MATI, but after reading your own words about what a self-entitled cunt you are with no respect for anyone poorer than you, same as the Thatcherites you despise, well... I'd say I have good reason.
 
Isalaide is a stupid fuck who enjoys riling up men on these forums. You can find them on most gender war threads posting the most repellant shit imaginable. Best to ignore their Seto Kaiba 5-D autism, that’s my advice.
Good chance you're all just falling for a troll attempt. I give it 9/10 odds that Isalaide is just a Fareal sock. We've got a whole thread in mass debates for Fareal's very similar fiction. https://kiwifarms.st/threads/fareal-tall-tales-appreciation-thread.185748/ Isalaide joined shortly after Fareal stopped posting.
 
I dont think my politics are radical and yet I have no one to vote for and that makes me angry
It is the absolute root of the problem, isn't it? This isn't a strictly two party system like the Americans have. And yet the spectrum of views is completely constrained by the endless laserlike autistic focus on focus grouping and micropolling, to set policies for a union of nations that has wildly diverse needs and policies depending on the region.

The most glaring example in this election week? Polls consistently suggest that a majority of voters now believe Brexit to have been an error. Whether a voter personally agrees with that or not, it is fucking nuts that not a single party is even prepared to put something as mild as 'closer co operation with the EU", a fucking keeping-in-touch option, on the table to keep our options open for a younger generation to rejoin. The fucking LibDems won't even advocate for Europe. "It's divisive!" Good. A healthy democracy, dealing with big issues, IS divisive. It has divisive discourse.

What we have is no discourse at all. What we have in this election, are basically no policies from anyone and certainly no guiding vision, anywhere, because any idea might frighten off someone. We must have one of the narrowest expressed Overton windows in the world.

I watched all those debates and honestly it was like watching a debate about left Twix versus right Twix.
 
It is the absolute root of the problem, isn't it? This isn't a strictly two party system like the Americans have. And yet the spectrum of views is completely constrained by the endless laserlike autistic focus on focus grouping and micropolling, to set policies for a union of nations that has wildly diverse needs and policies depending on the region.

The most glaring example in this election week? Polls consistently suggest that a majority of voters now believe Brexit to have been an error. Whether a voter personally agrees with that or not, it is fucking nuts that not a single party is even prepared to put something as mild as 'closer co operation with the EU", a fucking keeping-in-touch option, on the table to keep our options open for a younger generation to rejoin. The fucking LibDems won't even advocate for Europe. "It's divisive!" Good. A healthy democracy, dealing with big issues, IS divisive. It has divisive discourse.

What we have is no discourse at all. What we have in this election, are basically no policies from anyone and certainly no guiding vision, anywhere, because any idea might frighten off someone. We must have one of the narrowest expressed Overton windows in the world.

I watched all those debates and honestly it was like watching a debate about left Twix versus right Twix.
The UK has been an open uniparty for longer than the United States has existed. I feel sorry for you guys.
 
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