By Kevin A. Hassett
Wednesday, May 29, 2024
The campus protests of the past semester have for
the most part died down — until the fall at least. The pause gives us the
opportunity to reflect a little more analytically and a little less emotionally
on the position of the protesters. One can’t help but begin with the simplest
question. What were they hoping to accomplish?
Columbia University, to pick a major target, could not
possibly influence Israeli policy toward Gaza. The students, then, must have
had some other goal. One, which they clearly accomplished, was to make the
campus horribly inhospitable to Jews. While that might have given the most
antisemitic among them some joy, the truth is that students across a large
number of schools continued long negotiations and presented university
officials with a set of demands, which, if met, would have presumably induced
the students to suspend the protests. So, antisemitism for its own sake was
likely not the only animating factor. Chief among the demands nationwide was
that universities “divest” their endowments from Israel and perhaps from oil
companies as well. The students appeared to believe that this would benefit the
people of Gaza.
From news coverage at the time, it seemed clear that if
universities had agreed to divest, things may well have settled down. But what
else would that have accomplished?
First, consider that global capital markets for the most
part are efficient, and equity prices are a risk-adjusted expectation of their
future free cash flows. If every university in the U.S. dumped Israeli equities
all at once, it would in all likelihood have no effect on the price of Israeli
equities or on their future performance — in other words, it would do no harm
to Israel — as other buyers would swoop in. Assuming the endowments were also
invested in some other equities that were priced in an efficient market,
universities’ portfolios would be expected to have the same risk-adjusted
return going forward. So, the students demanded something that would have had
no effect on the situation in Gaza or on their universities, and the
universities refused.
On the other hand, perhaps the students believed in the
very unlikely possibility that they could convince a large number of global
investors to boycott Israeli equities. In that case, the market price of the
equities would drop right away below their expected future profits, and they
would therefore be expected to outperform relative to their price. So, an
opportunistic Warren Buffett–like investor could swoop in and buy the
undervalued stock and make outsized returns. But notice, since only “bad people”
who support Israel hold or would be interested in buying Israeli stocks (or oil
stocks), the effect of the change would be to take money that should have gone
to “good people” and hand it over to “bad people.” From the students’
perspective, it would achieve the exact opposite of their goal.
The students’ final objective, perhaps, beyond
proclaiming their own (supposed) virtue and establishing leadership positions
for themselves on the campus left, was to “send a message” to Israeli firms
that their government’s actions should be opposed. In this case, divestment
would be exactly the wrong thing to do. Consider a careful and clever study by
economist Matthew Kahn and his co-authors, who found striking evidence that
firms whose equities were purchased by green activist funds reduced their
pollution emissions relative to those not targeted. The logical conclusion,
then, is that if the activist students wanted to affect the behavior of Israeli
firms, they should have advocated that university endowments load up on Israeli
equities.
In other words, the major demand of these fools,
fanatics, and those who exploit them makes absolutely no sense whatsoever. Many
employers have announced that they will carefully examine job applicants and
disqualify those who participated in the protests. Even abstracting from
antisemitism, a college student who thinks poorly enough to make divestment his
No. 1 issue has no place in a position with any material decision-making
responsibility.
If I were a university president, I might have been
tempted to divest because the cost of doing so would be equal to the effect:
that is, zero. But it would set a bad precedent. One really shouldn’t negotiate
with terrorists, or their dupes.
No comments:
Post a Comment