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Are there any studies that show that "Affirmative Action" (an action or policy favoring those who tend to suffer from discrimination, especially in relation to employment or education) hurts the economy?

Based on personal research/reasoning, I believe that "Affirmative Action" could hurt the economy, but I would like to do more research on the subject. Any links to (credible) studies showing that "Affirmative Action" hurts the economy would be greatly appreciated.

Mathematician
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  • What about links to credible studies showing that "Affirmative Action" is beneficial for the economy? Are they of interest? 2) Perhaps it would be helpful if you included in the question a definition/description of what "Affirmative Action" is.
  • – Alecos Papadopoulos Aug 01 '15 at 14:42
  • @AlecosPapadopoulos 1) No. I knew that if I asked for articles showing the positives and negatives of Affirmative Action that I would be flooded with articles biased toward Affirmative Action. I am specifically trying to find articles supporting a politically unpopular view. 2) Will do! – Mathematician Aug 01 '15 at 18:20
  • Waiting for 2), thanks. As for 1), by "articles" I guess you mean theoretical economic papers that model how some specific realization of "Affirmative Action" can "hurt the economy" (remains to be defined what that means), and/or empirical/econometric papers that, after defining and measuring "Affirmative Action", use data to show that it has "hurt the economy". Am I understanding/describing your request correctly? – Alecos Papadopoulos Aug 01 '15 at 18:57
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    Are you looking for theoretical or empirical studies? For the theoretical part, there is a famous chapter on fair employment practices in Milton Friedman's Capitalism and Freedom. He opposes affirmative actions both in principle (because it restricts contractual freedom) and because it inflicts economic costs to employers. For more extensive and recent reviews, have you looked at Roland Fryer's and Glenn Loury's papers? – Oliv Aug 02 '15 at 10:07
  • @AlecosPapadopoulos 2) is in the parentheses in the first paragraph. Also, you have interpreted my question correctly. – Mathematician Aug 02 '15 at 19:58
  • @Oliv I am looking for both theoretical and empirical studies. Thank you for your references; I will look into them. – Mathematician Aug 02 '15 at 19:59
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    @Mathematician You're welcome! It would be nice if you could share the results of your search, so please don't hesitate to answer your own question if you find something relevant. – Oliv Aug 07 '15 at 13:56