Why were there more black experts in 1980's "Free to Choose" than there typically are in today's TV?
October 27, 2007 4:35 AM Subscribe
When watching Milton Friedman's
"Free to Choose" (PBS, 1980), I was (pleasantly) surprised at the high number of black experts (and women) who were guests in the show. Not the usually array of exclusively old, white guys one would have expected.
To be honest, I've never seen *any* public/TV appearances of black economists/social scientists outside of this program, e.g. in contemporary TV. I would have expected the opposite, since racial equality in the U.S. seems to have made some progress since the 70s/80s (or has it?)
Could it be that there there more blacks in this field (or in science, in general) in the 80s than today? Or did PBS have some kind of "quota"?
Disclaimer: I'm not from the U.S., so I may be missing something here.
posted by The Toad to society & culture (9 answers total) 1 user marked this as a favorite
The book says that programs were set up in the 70s to encourage young economists from Bolivia, Chile etc to come to the US for their education. The idea was that they would be taught free market ideals and then return to their own countries and attempt to implement the policies. In some cases this process was helped along with a quick regime change.
The policy appeared to be a success, with graduates of the program often taking up high ranking positions in their own governments and later organisations such as the world bank and IMF.
I'd recommend the book - it offers an incredibly interesting yet disturbing take on a wide range of world events. Not being politically that aware I can't really vouch for it's accuracy - it's clear there is significant bias again US foreign policy and Milton Friedman in particular, which is either entirely correct or totally one-sided depending on your point of view.
posted by astro38 at 5:08 AM on October 27, 2007 [1 favorite]