Santa Fe New Mexican

Own a pet and flashlight? Study says it tells race

- By Andrew Van Dam

The cultural divide is real, and it’s huge. Americans live such different lives that what we buy, do or watch can be used to predict our politics, race, income, education and gender — sometimes with more than 90 percent accuracy.

It turns out that people are separated not just by gun ownership, religion and their beliefs on affirmativ­e action — but also by English muffins, flashlight­s and mustard.

To prove it, University of Chicago economists Marianne Bertrand and Emir Kamenica taught machines to guess a person’s income, political ideology, race, education and gender based on either their media habits, their consumer behavior, their social and political beliefs, and even how they spent their time. Their results were released in a new working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research.

The duo trained their algorithms to detect patterns in decades of responses to three long-running surveys. The surveys were tuned and filtered to be consistent over time, which allowed Bertrand and Kamenica to measure how America’s cultural divides have evolved.

Spending predicts gender with almost perfect accuracy, for example, because men don’t buy nearly as much mascara as women do, and women buy much less aftershave/cologne than men do. But others are revelatory: White people and black people are almost as different in their spending habits as rich people and poor people are, for example.

Difference­s in social attitudes between liberals and conservati­ves have been widened over time, Bertrand and Kamenica found. The gap in social attitudes between whites and nonwhites has fallen slightly, but the difference in consumer behavior between races has grown.

Race

In the world of television in 2016, some of the top 10 predictors of whiteness were watching Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, American Pickers, The Big Bang Theory and the Kentucky Derby. If we’re looking at specific brand names, the top 10 included Thomas’ English muffins, Sweet Baby Ray’s barbecue sauce and Stove Top stuffing.

More generally, in consumer products, the best predictor of whiteness was whether someone owned a pet — followed closely by whether they owned a flashlight. Many of the difference­s appear to be correlated with wealth and homeowners­hip, areas in which America suffers from vast racial disparitie­s.

The Federal Reserve has found that the median net worth of a white household in 2016 was 9.7 times greater than that of a black one.

Each analysis is binary, meaning that although the authors frame everything in terms of predicting whether someone is white, or high income, or male, the direct opposite is equally true. In other words, “doesn’t own a pet” predicts that someone isn’t white just as strongly as “owns a pet” predicts that someone is white.

To maintain statistica­l integrity, the authors were able to break the population into only two categories, “white” and “nonwhite,” which may hide difference­s across a large and diverse population.

Income

Attitudes toward police violence are only a few percentage points less effective in predicting high (in the top 25 percent) income than they are in predicting whiteness. The overlap shows how closely related race and income are, probably because of historical disparitie­s and continuing problems with racial bias.

Race aside, consumer behavior is strongly linked to income level. In 1992, Grey Poupon mustard predicted income better than any other brand. By 2016, its place as the key signifier of the country’s economic and cultural divide had been taken by Apple’s iPhone — which the researcher­s found to be a much clearer signifier of income than the condiment had been.

Politics

Because of limitation­s in the media and consumer components of the survey they used, researcher­s couldn’t get reliable data on the liberal-conservati­ve split that was more recent than 2009. But difference­s up to that time include some of the most interestin­g findings in the survey.

They start with superficia­l difference­s: If someone went to Arby’s or Applebee’s or used Jif peanut butter, you might guess they were conservati­ve. If they didn’t own fishing gear or use ranch dressing, but drank alcohol and bought novels? Probably a liberal.

The researcher­s find that, across almost every dimension, America’s cultural divide has remained constant. Yes, high income households buy different things from low income ones, and white Americans and black Americans watch different television programs and movies. We’re divided. But we always have been and, despite popular narratives to the contrary, it’s not getting worse.

“What’s really striking to me,” Kamenica said, “is how constant cultural divisions have been as the world has changed.”

But there’s one exception. And it’s a big one. The ideologica­l difference between conservati­ves and liberals is wide and growing.

“This is not a new phenomenon,” Kamenica said. “For the past 40 years, liberals and conservati­ves are disagreein­g more each year. On every topic, liberals and conservati­ves are disagreein­g more than they used to.”

And their analysis of television-watching habits indicates that the nature of America’s media divide may be changing, even if its size isn’t. In 2001, you could predict that someone was conservati­ve if he or she hadn’t watched the Academy Awards or Will and Grace. By 2009, those cultural signifiers had been replaced by three major Fox News programs: The O’Reilly Factor, Fox and Friends and Hannity & Colmes.

According to Bertrand, cultural factors such as television and movies matter because of how they enable (or disable) conversati­on and exchange between neighbors of different background­s and viewpoints.

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