0. Preface: The Best Immigration Policy
0. Introduction: How Economists Learned the Power of Culture
1. The Assimilation Myth
2. Prosperity Migrates
3. Places or Peoples?
4. The Migration of Good Government
5. Our Diversity Is Our ____________
6. The I-7
7. The Chinese Diaspora: Building the Capitalist Road
8. The Deep Roots across the Fifty United States
9. Intercalary: Je ne sais quoi
10. Conclusion: The Goose and the Golden Eggs
Garett Jones is Associate Professor of Economics at the Center for Study of Public Choice, George Mason University. He is the author of 10% Less Democracy: Why You Should Trust Elites a Little More and the Masses a Little Less (Stanford, 2020) and Hive Mind: How Your Nation's IQ Matters So Much More Than Your Own (Stanford, 2015).
"Immigrants change the countries they move to. The Culture
Transplant is the very best book on this phenomenon, reflecting the
continuing rise of Garett Jones as a thinker and writer of real
import."—Tyler Cowen, blogger, Marginal Revolution "Synthesizing
decades of new work in development economics, Garett Jones
re-examines and rejects some of the core assumptions within the
modern immigration debate. Defenders of open borders—utilitarians
in particular—will have to seriously grapple with this novel and
groundbreaking book."—Hrishikesh Joshi, Bowling Green State
University "A unique and authoritative treatment of the deep
persistence of cultural attributes that permeates across
generations, and through migration, shapes institutions and
contemporary outcomes. By focusing on people rather than places,
Garett Jones provides a unique perspective on how we should think
about the role of migration and diversity in understanding modern
successes and failures. Jones's treatment of the literature is a
master class in distilling rigorous research and presenting it in a
breezy fashion that is hard to put down once you get
started."—Areendam Chanda, Louisiana State University "The Culture
Transplant is a good read, a brief dive into the intriguing
question of why some places and some people are so much more
prosperous than others."—Robert VerBruggen, Wall Street Journal
Much of the literature on immigrant assimilation looks at easily
observable questions about subsequent generations, such as whether
they are learning English, graduating high school, and moving up
the income ladder. Jones's book proves that these external
accomplishments do not necessarily indicate assimilation at the
deeper level of cultural values. This is of the greatest possible
importance, because every day social science discovers further
evidence that these cultural values, more than anything else,
determine what a country's politics and its economy will look like
in the future."—Helen Andrews, The American Conservative "Jones has
written an excellent synopsis of the deep roots of culture and the
persistent effects of these deep roots. The book is concise and
easy to read, led by Jones's ability to decompose complicated ideas
into easily understood examples and descriptions. Researchers and
the public will gain valuable insights from The Cultural
Transplant, a better understanding of the persistence of culture
and longrunning factors that have placed countries on socioeconomic
trajectories that have yielded vast differences in living standards
across the world."—C. Justin Cook, The Developing Economies "Most
economists agree that immigration—including illegal
immigration—leads to greater economic growth and innovation.
However, Jones argues that immigrants transplant their culture in
the countries they move to, making the economies there similar to
those in their home countries. Where immigrants come from and their
home nation's technological development are critical to the
economic and cultural impacts they have on the countries they move
to."—P. Z. McKay, CHOICE "The vital question of what a nation
is—and how it sees itself—relates to what our collective futures
will be in the nations of the Anglosphere. This demands insightful
analysis and careful argumentation from those who know what they
are talking about.
"Fortunately, we have precisely that mix of virtues in Garett
Jones' book The Culture Transplant: How Migrants Make the Economies
They Move To a Lot Like the Ones They Left."—Henry George, Merion
West
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