| > Only if you assume that finding qualified minority candidates is just as easy as finding other qualified candidates. Or that hiring chances are equally distributed. Nope, it's independent of any of that, because the effect is relative to what other companies do rather than any of those things. And when you do that experiment in the real world rather than a lab, you get the opposite result anyway: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/innovations/wp/2016/07/1... http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-06-30/bilnd-recruitment-tria... > Also, is it Google's responsibility to make sure other companies have the best candidates, minority or not? It's not about who gets the best candidates -- presumably the men who are displaced are of equal quality and then go to work for the same other companies. The problem is that it creates an unfair black mark against every woman who doesn't get hired at Google despite Google having a special preference for them, and then leaves them in an environment with an even worse gender ratio than it was already. And these other companies feed into Google. Plenty of women get their first jobs there and go work for Google later. If Google makes it harder for the women there and increases the number who drop out as a result, that's bad for everyone including them. |
Can you elaborate on this more? Or give examples?