📄 Extracted Text (555 words)
To: [email protected][[email protected]]; Epstein, Jeff[[email protected]]
From: Ed
Sent: Thur 5/17/2012 1:53:20 PM
Subject: How Crazy Is Wall Street (at least in the New York times)
psychos.odf
How Crazy is Wall Street?
By Edward Jay Epstein
The New York Times published an article on May 14, 2012 concerning the
question of whether the rich, from a moral standpoint, are good or bad. The
story reported that A recent study found that 10 percent of people who work on
Wall Street are clinical psychopaths and that they exhibit an unparalleled
capacity for lying, fabrication, and manipulation. The vivid term clinical
psychopath brings to mind the berserk buzz-saw wielding investment banker played
by Christian Bale in the film American Psycho. Since some 3.9 million people
work in the financial services industry, a clinically-diagnosed horde of lunatics
numbering almost 400,000 people would certainly be a matter of public concern,
though it might only confirm some journalist s view of American capitalism.
It is fair to ask what is the provenance of this incredible study. The New
York Times cites its source as a March 12, 2011 story in THIS WEEK, which
attributes the psychopath data to an estimate made by free-lance writer Sherree
DeCovny in CFA Magazine, in an article entitled T
<http://www.cfapubS.Org/doi/abs/10.2469/cfm.v23.n2.20>he Financial Psychopath
Next Door. She wrote that studies conducted by Canadian forensic psychologist
Robert Hare indicate that about 1 percent of the general population can be
categorized as psychopathic, but the prevalence rate in the financial services
industry is 10 percent. The problem here is that Hare never conducted a
clinical study of the financial service industry, and never did a research that
10 percent of its members were psychopaths. John Grohol, the editor of World
of Psychology, after the publication of DeCovny s article, asked Hare about the
putative study. Hare told him, I don t know who threw out the 10% but it
certainly did not come from me or my colleagues. The closest he came to such
a claim was in a research paper he co-authored that analyzed the responses
submitted by 203 corporate professionals from seven companies, none of which
were on Wall Street. Nor were these 203 people randomly selected . He found that
the answers of only eight people approximately 4 percent of the sample
indicated psychopathic tendencies on a scale he had devised. Even though this
was not a clinical study, the responses of these eight people, who might have not
even worked in financial services, were transformed via the blogospshere into a
supposedly scientific finding noted in one of our most respected newspapers that
one-tenth of those working on Wall Street are clinical psychopaths. As Ryan
Holiday, author of Trust Me, I'm Lying: Confessions of a Media Manipulator,
explained to me, "Headline-grabbing trend
manufacturing such as this now dominates the pseudo-news cycle on the Web."
Welcome to the Internet, which is not known for its source-checking.
Unfortunately It is then only a short leap to the co-called newspaper of record,
which is happy to serve up to the public this non-existing study, which like much
else that demonizes financiers as a scientific finding. As a result, we now have
mad men of Wall Street running amok in the public imagination
Edward Jay Epstein is author of Myths of the Media <http://amzn.to/KifIfM> .
as ever,
Ed Epstein
www.edwardjayepstein.com
EFTA_R1_00518356
EFTA02015431
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