The A migrates, yet remains an A.

"Jones has written an excellent synopsis of the deep roots of culture and the persistent effects of these deep roots."

C. Justin Cook, The Developing Economies

Preface and Introduction Wall Street Journal Review

My Interview with L'Express (in French)

My Case for Boosting the UK Population 20% (Telegraph)

WSJ's Dhume applies The Culture Transplant to the UK

YouTube Short: Open Borders for Iceland

Order at Amazon, Stanford University Press, Politics and Prose, Barnes and Noble, Bookshop, Indiebound

The Culture Transplant: 

How Migrants Make the Economies They Move to a Lot Like the Ones They Left

Savings rates, views on government regulation, attitudes toward trust: Migrants appear to transplant all three from their home countries, partly passing them on to the second generation in their new homes.  

On average, and in the long run, the pattern is clear: knowing where your nation's ancestors came from in the past can help you predict your nation's economic future.  

"Immigrants change the countries they move to. The Culture Transplant is the very best book on this phenomenon, reflecting the continuing rise of Garett Jones as a thinker and writer of real import."

Tyler Cowen, blogger, Marginal Revolution 

"Synthesizing decades of new work in development economics, Garett Jones re-examines and rejects some of the core assumptions within the modern immigration debate. Defenders of open borders—utilitarians in particular—will have to seriously grapple with this novel and groundbreaking book."

Hrishikesh Joshi, Bowling Green State University

"A unique and authoritative treatment of the deep persistence of cultural attributes that permeates across generations, and through migration, shapes institutions and contemporary outcomes. By focusing on people rather than places, Garett Jones provides a unique perspective on how we should think about the role of migration and diversity in understanding modern successes and failures. Jones's treatment of the literature is a master class in distilling rigorous research and presenting it in a breezy fashion that is hard to put down once you get started."

Areendam Chanda, Louisiana State University

Chapter Summaries at Stanford University Press. Buy it Now: Amazon, Stanford University Press, Politics and Prose, Barnes and Noble, Bookshop, Indiebound

I'm a macroeconomist at George Mason University. 

My academic research spans monetary economics, experimental game theory, behavioral macroeconomics, and public choice.

I'm the author of the Singapore Trilogy: Hive Mind, 10% Less Democracy, and now The Culture Transplant, all with Stanford University Press.

In the past, I've been an editor for The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, I served as an early advisor to the Reserve stablecoin project, and I worked in the United States Senate.