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THE MOLECULE OF MORE
by the Institute for Immigration Research at George Mason University,
between 1901 and 2013 the United States received 42 percent of all
Nobel Prizes awarded, the highest of any country in the world. More-
over, a disproportionate number of American Nobel laureates have
been immigrants. The top three countries they came from were Can-
ada (13%), Germany (11%), and the United Kingdom (11%).
The United States continues to attract immigrants from all over
the world, and the immigrant population continues to include a high
proportion of extraordinary individuals.
Some of the most important
companies of the new economy were founded by immigrants, including
Google, Intel, PayPal, eBay, and Snapchat. As of 2005, 52 percent of
Silicon Valley start-ups had been founded by immigrant entrepreneurs,
a remarkable figure in light of the fact that immigrants make up only
13 percent of the U.S. population. The country that provides America
with the greatest number of technology entrepreneurs is India.
In the book
Exceptional People: How Migration Shaped Our World and
Will Define Our Future, the authors report that in 2006,
foreign nation-
als living in the United States were listed as inventors or co-inventors
on 40 percent of all international patent applications filed by the U.S.
government. Immigrants also file the majority of patents by leading
technology companies: 60 percent of the total at Cisco, 64 percent at
General Electric, 65 percent at Merck, and 72 percent at Qualcomm.
Immigrants don’t just launch technology companies. From nail
salons, restaurants, and dry cleaners to the fastest-growing companies
in America, immigrants start a quarter of
all new businesses in the
United States—about twice as many per capita as other Americans.
And looking at entrepreneurship broadly, we can come full circle and
find a direct link to dopamine.
A group of researchers led by Nicos Nicolaou of the Entrepreneur-
ship & Innovation Enterprise Research Centre at the Warwick Business
School recruited 1,335 people in the United Kingdom and asked them
to fill out a questionnaire on entrepreneurship and to provide a blood
sample for DNA extraction. The average age of the volunteers was 55
years and 83 percent were women. Nicolaou found a dopamine gene
that came in two forms (alleles), identical except for one single building
197
PROGRESS
block. That variation in the building block (called a nucleic acid) made
one form of the gene more active than the other.
People who had the
more active form were almost twice as likely to have started a new busi-
ness compared to those who had the less active form.
It’s worth noting that it’s not just the United States that has been
shaped by dopaminergic immigrants. The Global Entrepreneurship
Monitor, an ongoing project sponsored by Babson College and the
London School of Economics, found that the four nations with the
highest per capita creation of new companies are the United States,
Canada, Israel, and Australia—three of which are among the top nine
countries with the highest immigrant
populations in the world, and one
of which, Israel, is less than three generations from its founding as an
immigrant state.
There are a limited number of highly dopaminergic people in the
world, so one country’s gain is another country’s loss. Many American
immigrants came from Europe, a migration that boosted the dopami-
nergic gene pool in the United States, leaving
Europe with a residual
population more likely to take an H&N approach to life.
1
The Pew Research Center conducted a survey to learn more about
the differences between Americans and Europeans, and published
their findings in a report titled
The American–Western European Values Gap.
Although values are influenced by many factors other than genetics,
some of the questions they asked were closely related to the dopaminer-
gic personality. For example, they asked, “Is success in
life determined
by forces outside our control?” In Germany, 72 percent said yes. In
France it was 57 percent, and in Britain, 41 percent. However, only a
little more than a third of U.S. respondents said outside forces were in
control, while the majority took a more dopaminergic outlook.
The dopaminergic difference shows up in other questions, too.
Americans were more likely to approve of the use of military force—the
1 In chapter five, we discussed ways in which American liberals, representing the
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