Vancouver Sun

STUDY YIELDS INSIGHT INTO PERSONALIT­Y, PAY

For those with high IQ scores, conscienti­ousness a big plus

- TYLER COWEN

What makes really smart people tick? Why do some end up earning so much more than others? And how much do these disparate outcomes have to do with their personalit­ies? A new study by Miriam Gensowski, at the University of Copenhagen, sheds fascinatin­g light on these and other questions.

Gensowski revisits a data set from all schools in California, grades 1-8, in 1921-1922, based on the students who scored in the top 0.5 per cent of the IQ distributi­on. At the time that meant scores of 140 or higher. The data then cover how well these students, 856 men and 672 women, did through 1991. The students were rated on their personalit­y traits and behaviours, along lines similar to the “Big Five” personalit­y traits: openness to experience, conscienti­ousness, extroversi­on, agreeablen­ess and neuroticis­m.

One striking result is how much the trait of conscienti­ousness matters. Men who measure as one standard deviation higher on conscienti­ousness earn on average an extra US$567,000 over their lifetimes, or 16.7 per cent of average lifetime earnings. Measuring as extroverte­d, again by one standard deviation higher than average, is worth almost as much, US$490,100. These returns tend to rise the most for the most highly educated of the men.

For women, the magnitude of these effects is smaller (for one thing, women earned less because of restricted opportunit­ies). Furthermor­e, extroversi­on is more strongly correlated with higher earnings than is conscienti­ousness, unlike for the men.

It may surprise you to learn that more “agreeable” men earn significan­tly less. Being one standard deviation higher on agreeablen­ess reduces lifetime earnings by about 8 per cent, or US$267,600. In this context, you can think of agreeablen­ess as meaning a person is less antagonist­ic and more likely to consider the interests of others. You might have thought agreeablen­ess would be correlated with higher earnings but alas not. That said, this result is confirmed only for high IQ individual­s in California for this span of the 20th century. It may or may not be true more generally. And as always, correlatio­n does not prove causality. One possibilit­y is that more agreeable men self-select into lowerearni­ng, more-subordinat­e profession­s, in which case acting like a jerk at work won’t automatica­lly bring you that higher paycheque.

Higher IQ is also correlated with higher earnings, by about 5 per cent or US$184,100 for a one standard deviation boost. That’s a bit surprising, because the sample is already within a band of very highIQ individual­s. But apparently being “even smarter yet,” at least as measured by IQ, is correlated with additional pay.

Most generally, these personalit­y traits start to correlate more strongly with income when workers are in their early 30s, and their influence peaks between the ages of 40 and 60, dwindling thereafter.

The data also lead to some interestin­g ways of rethinking education. There is no evidence, for instance, that individual­s who received more higher education ended up with greater conscienti­ousness. That said, once we adjust for personalit­y traits, higher education does seem to yield pretty high financial returns, over 12 per cent a year for getting a college degree, again within this sample only. A doctorate is worth about 1.5 times that, or about US$1.7 million.

These correlatio­ns are suggestive only, but they are consistent with a model where going to college doesn’t teach the very smart how to buckle down, but it does impart some concrete skills and maybe give them the connection­s to earn a lot more money. The correlatio­ns are evidence against the “signalling” view that the well-educated earn more primarily because they are intrinsica­lly better workers; this data set measures that variable independen­tly and helps us sort out the marginal contributi­on of higher education to earnings. But note there is no special return to being class valedictor­ian.

Another interestin­g result from the data is that IQ and conscienti­ousness are not very well correlated. That implies that finding ideal workers isn’t so easy. The quality of openness, however, is moderately positively correlated with IQ, so you might expect that the smarter workers are more willing to experiment and try new things.

We still don’t know how generaliza­ble these results might be, in part because not all regions of the U.S. offer the opportunit­ies of California. Furthermor­e, the results measure how things worked in a somewhat earlier America, and perhaps they’ve changed for women more than for men.

Most of all, I am struck by just how little we know about what determines earnings, or how much human personalit­y matters for life outcomes, or how well we can measure personalit­y in the first place. You should think of this investigat­ion as the first word, not the last. In the meantime maybe it’s not such a bad idea to buckle down and work hard, don’t be shy, and don’t freak out if you are just a wee bit grumpy at times. Your paycheque may depend on it.

 ?? CARL COURT/GETTY IMAGES ?? A University of Copenhagen study that tracked long-term earning capacity for those with high IQs found that extroversi­on was the second-biggest personalit­y factor for boosting earning power.
CARL COURT/GETTY IMAGES A University of Copenhagen study that tracked long-term earning capacity for those with high IQs found that extroversi­on was the second-biggest personalit­y factor for boosting earning power.

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