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IQ and Global Inequality

IQ and Global Inequality is a controversial 2006 book by Dr. Richard Lynn, Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Ulster, Northern Ireland, and Dr. Tatu Vanhanen, Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland. IQ and Global Inequality is follow-up to their 2002 book IQ and the Wealth of Nations, an expansion of the argument that international differences in current economic development are due in part to differences in average national intelligence as indicated by national IQ estimates, and a response to critics. Unlike IQ and the Wealth of Nations, the book was not published by an academic publisher but by Washington Summit Publishers.

Lynn and Vanhanen's research on IQ and economic development has attracted academic attention from several fields, with mixed reception. There has also been criticisms.

Summary

Calculated and estimated national average IQ according to book.
  ≤65   70   75   80   85   90   95   100   ≥105   N/A
  • Chapter 1 summarizes theories of economic growth.
  • Chapter 2 defines and describes intelligence.
  • Chapter 3 argues that the scientific literature indicates that intelligence is a determinant of incomes and related phenomena among individuals within a number of countries.
  • Chapter 4 describes the collection and determination of national IQ, presenting calculated IQs for 113 countries and estimated IQs for an additional 79 countries. This represents all countries with population greater than 40,000.
  • Chapter 5 introduces a new statistic, the quality of human condition index (QHC) and 12 alternative variables that measure human conditions.
  • Chapter 7 focuses on the relationship between national IQ and QHC, which Lynn and Vanhanen report to be strongly correlated.
  • Chapter 8 examines the relationship between national IQ and 12 alternative variables, which Lynn and Vanhanen report are also correlated with national IQ.
  • Chapter 9 discusses the genetic and environmental contributions to differences in national intelligence, and argues that racial composition of the population is a major factor.
  • Chapter 10 considers the causal relationship between national IQ and important variables related to global inequality.
  • Chapter 11 discusses and responds to criticisms made to Lynn and Vanhanen's theory by reviewers. *Chapter 12 summarizes the book and discusses policy recommendations.

Reception

The book received a mixed reception ranging from praise to dismissal.

J. Philippe Rushton in a review writes that book extends and answers criticisms against the earlier work in several ways. The number of nations for which there were IQ tests available increased from 81 to 113. The correlation between IQ and income per person was 0.68 which is virtually identical to the one reported in the earlier book. The book compared the IQ values for the 32 new nations for which IQ tests were available with the estimations for these nations in the earlier book which was based on averaging neighboring nations values. The correlation was very high, 0.91. Rushton thus conclude that this method is remarkably accurate.

Rushton states that the authors also compared the results of the IQ tests for those nations were several were available (71 nations). They found a very high correlation of 0.95 and thus concluded that the IQ tests done have a very high reliability regarding measuring IQ. The authors furthermore compared the national IQs to national scores of school students in tests of mathematics and science. The correlations were between 0.79 and 0.89. This, Rushton writes, establishes that the national IQs have very high validity as measures of national differences in cognitive ability.

The methods of the study were criticized by Richard E. Nisbett for relying on small and haphazard samples and for ignoring data that did not support the conclusions.

One study, A systematic literature review of the average IQ of sub-Saharan Africans, by Jelte M. Wicherts and colleagues stated that:

"For instance, Lynn and Vanhanen (2006) accorded a national IQ of 69 to Nigeria on the basis of three samples (Fahrmeier, 1975; Ferron, 1965; Wober, 1969), but they did not consider other relevant published studies that indicated that average IQ in Nigeria is considerably higher than 70 (Maqsud, 1980a,b; Nenty & Dinero, 1981; Okunrotifa, 1976). As Lynn rightly remarked during the 2006 conference of the International Society for Intelligence Research (ISIR), performing a literature review involves making a lot of choices. Nonetheless, an important drawback of Lynn (and Vanhanen)'s reviews of the literature is that they are unsystematic."

However, the study also did its own literature review on the average IQ of sub-Saharan Africans. It did not find as low a value as the book, below 70, but the estimated average value of 82 is still quire low.

Richard Lynna and Gerhard Meisenberg in turn replied that "critical evaluation of the studies presented by WDM shows that many of these are based on unrepresentative elite samples" and that "an IQ of 68 as the best reading of the IQ in sub-Saharan Africa".

Studies using the national IQ scores from the book

A number of studies have accepted and used the national IQ scores from the book. Higher national education levels and IQ had a strong positive impact on democracy, rule of law and political liberty independent from GDP. Lower national IQ is associated with more violent crime. Higher national IQ is associated with more atheism. Higher national IQ is associated with more patents per person. Lower national IQs associated with higher HIV-infection rates, which is stronger effect than the association with low gross domestic product and low modernization. Both higher GDP and IQ independently reduce fertility. The study argues that "at present rates of fertility and mortality and in the absence of changes within countries, the average IQ of the young world population would decline by 1.34 points per decade and the average per capita income would decline by 0.79% per year."

National IQ and economic development

Quality of human conditions index

Richard Lynn and Tatu Vanhanen's QHC index.
  11   15   20   30   40   50   60   70   80   85   89   N/A

The quality of human conditions (QHC) index was computed from five variables.

  1. purchasing power parity Gross National Income (PPP-GNI) per capita 2002
  2. adult literacy rate 2002
  3. gross tertiary enrollment ratio
  4. life expectancy at birth 2002
  5. the level of democratization 2002 (Tatu Vanhanen's Index of Democratization)

Values of the index range from 10.7 (Burkina Faso) to 89 (Norway). Lynn and Vanhanen write that they would have preferred to include a sixth measure, an indicator of income inequality, but that statistical data for that variable was not available for all countries. They write that the QHC index differs significantly from other widely used indexes (such as the Human Development Index) in that QHC also measures democratization. Some of their claims have been received support in a 2007 study by Rindermann.

All countries Estimate IQ
(79 countries)
Total
(192 countries)
QHC 0.805 0.725 0.791
PPP GNI per capita 2002 0.693 0.342 0.616
Adult literacy rate 2002 0.642 0.655 0.655
Tertiary enrollment ratio 0.746 0.699 0.745
Life expectancy at birth 2002 0.765 0.690 0.750
Index of Democratization 2002 0.569 0.322 0.530
Excluding smallest countries Calculated IQ
(98 countries)
Estimate IQ
(62 countries)
Total
(160 countries)
QHC 0.846 0.800 0.839
PPP GNI per capita 2002 0.739 0.266 0.649
Adult literacy rate 2002 0.710 0.746 0.733
Tertiary enrollment ratio 0.778 0.734 0.780
Life expectancy at birth 2002 0.833 0.753 0.817
Index of Democratization 2002 0.598 0.408 0.584

Other measures of global inequality

The relationship of national IQ to twelve other measures of global inequality were examined.

  1. Human Development Index (HDI)
  2. Gender-related Development Index (GDI)
  3. Economic growth rate (EGR)
  4. Gini index of inequality in income or consumption (Gini)
  5. Population below $2 a day international poverty line (Poverty)
  6. Measures of undernourishment (PUN)
  7. Maternal mortality ratio (MMR) and infant mortality rate (IMR)
  8. Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI)
  9. Economic freedom ratings (EFR)
  10. the Index of Economic Freedom (IEF)
  11. Population pyramids (MU-index)
  12. Human happiness and life-satisfaction.

All twelve measures of global inequality are significantly correlated with the QHC index. According to the book, eleven of the twelve measures are significantly correlated with national IQ. The measures of human happiness and life satisfaction are not significantly correlated with national IQ.

Correlations IQ QHC
HDI 0.776 0.940
GDI 0.849 0.951
EGR 3 0.747 0.840
EGR 4 0.709 0.871
Gini -0.538 -0.464
Poverty -0.653 -0.799
PUN 1 -0.500 -0.648
MMR -0.730 -0.759
IMR -0.771 -0.861
CPI 0.591 0.762
EFR 0.606 0.674
IEF 0.418 0.620
MU-index 0.806 0.902
Happiness 0.029 0.315
Life satisfaction 0.033 0.396

Latitude and temperature

Correlation Latitude Temperature
Degrees latitude 1 -0.885
Annual mean temperature -0.885 1
National IQ 0.677 -0.632
QHC 0.659 -0.562
PPP GNI per capita 2002 0.528 -0.407
Adult literacy rate 2002 0.482 -0.467
Tertiary enrollment ratio 0.718 -0.649
Life expectancy at birth 2002 0.505 -0.379
Index of Democratization 2002 0.512 -0.460

National IQ and QHC values

Lynn and Vanhanen base their analysis on data gathered from a literature review. They selected IQ data from studies which covered 113 nations. For another 79 nations, they estimated the mean IQs on the basis of the arithmetic means of the measured IQs of neighboring countries. They justify this method of estimation by pointing out that the correlation between the estimated national IQs they reported in IQ and the Wealth of Nations and the measured national IQs since obtained is very high (0.913). In the chart below, these estimates have been marked with an asterisk (*). The chart also includes the measured and estimated IQs from IQ and the Wealth of Nations.

Lynn and Vanhanen calculated the national IQs in relation to a British mean of 100, with a standard deviation of 15. They adjusted all test results to account for the Flynn effect: adjustments were 2 points per decade for Raven's Progressive Matrices and 3 points per decade for all other types of tests. When two IQ studies were used from one country, their mean was calculated, whereas when three or more were available, the median was used. Lynn and Vanhanen recommend the provision of iodine and other micronutrients as a way to increase cognitive functioning in the Third World.

Country/Region IQ (2002) IQ (2006) PPP-GNI per capita 2002 QHC
 Hong Kong 107 108 27,490 60.8
 Singapore 103 108 23,730 60.7
 North Korea 105* 106* 1,000 38
 South Korea 106 106 16,960 75.4
 Japan 105 105 27,380 71.4
 Taiwan 104 105 23,400 79.4
 China 100 105 4,520 39.7
 Italy 102 102 26,170 78.9
 Iceland 98* 101 29,240 80
 Mongolia 98* 101* 1,710 48.1
  Switzerland 101 101 31,840 82.2
 Austria 102 100 28,910 80.7
 Luxembourg 101* 100* 53,230 76.4
 Netherlands 102 100 28,350 82.8
 Norway 98 100 36,690 89
 United Kingdom 100 100 26,580 76.7
 Germany 102 99 26,980 78
 Belgium 100 99 28,130 84.1
 Canada 97 99 28,930 77.8
 Estonia 97* 99 11,630 64.5
 Finland 97 99 26,160 85.1
 New Zealand 100 99 20,550 76.2
 Poland 99 99 10,450 62.7
 Sweden 101 99 25,820 82.9
 Andorra N/A 98* 19,000 58.7
 Spain 99 98 21,910 75.8
 Australia 98 98 27,440 82.8
 Czech Republic 97 98 14,920 64.5
 Denmark 98 98 30,600 85.4
 France 98 98 27,040 78.1
 Hungary 99 98 13,070 64.1
 Latvia 97* 98* 9,190 65.5
 United States 98* 98* 36,120 86.6
 Belarus 96* 97* 5,500 57.2
 Malta 95* 97 17,710 66.4
 Russia 96 97 8,080 64.5
 Ukraine 96* 97* 4,800 61.8
 Moldova 95* 96* 1,600 46.2
 Slovakia 96 96 12,590 63.2
 Uruguay 96 96 7,710 64
 Israel 94 95 19,000 75.3
 Portugal 95 95 17,820 67
 Armenia 93* 94* 3,230 50.2
 Georgia 93* 94* 2,270 51.2
 Kazakhstan 93* 94* 5,630 49
 Romania 94 94 6,490 53
 Vietnam 96* 94* 2,300 39.6
 Argentina 96 93 10,190 64.7
 Bulgaria 93 93 7,030 59.1
 Greece 92 92 18,770 76.1
 Malaysia 92 92 8,500 78.5
 Ireland 93 92 29,570 52.1
 Brunei 92* 91* 19,210 50.8
 Cambodia 89* 91* 1,970 28.6
 Cyprus 92* 91* 18,650 67.6
 Lithuania 97* 91 10,190 65.4
 Republic of Macedonia 93* 91* 6,420 54.4
 Thailand 91 91 6,890 50.3
 Albania 90* 90* 4,960 51.2
 Bermuda N/A 90 36,000 75.8
 Bosnia and Herzegovina N/A 90* 5,800 51.4
 Chile 93* 90 9,420 59.5
 Croatia 90 90 10,000 61.7
 Kyrgyzstan 87* 90* 1,560 48.1
 Turkey 90 90 6,300 50.2
 Mexico 87 90 12,500 52.9
 Cook Islands N/A 89 5,000 45.7
 Costa Rica 91* 89* 8,650 53.7
 Laos 89* 89 1,660 24.9
 Mauritius 81* 89 10,820 52.2
 Suriname 89 89 6,590 50.6
 Ecuador 80 88 3,340 47.4
 Samoa 87 88 5,570 49.7
 Azerbaijan 87* 87* 3,010 47.2
 Bolivia 85* 87 2,390 49.7
 Brazil 87 87 7,450 51.1
 East Timor N/A 87* 3,940 46.7
 Guyana 84* 87* 3,070 40.2
 Indonesia 89 87 1,600 28.1
 Iraq 87 87 1,027 30.7
 Myanmar 86* 87* 930 42.4
 Tajikistan 87* 87* 1,640 27.5
 Turkmenistan 87* 87* 4,780 41.7
 Uzbekistan 87* 87* 1,640 39.4
 Kuwait 83* 86 17,780 49.9
 Philippines 86 86 4,450 51.6
 Seychelles 81* 86* 18,232 60.6
 Tonga 87 86 6,820 40.5
 Cuba 85 85 5,259 46.2
 Fiji 84 85 5,330 51.9
 Kiribati 84* 85* 800 37.1
 New Caledonia N/A 85 21,960 54.9
 Peru 90 85 4,880 49.2
 Trinidad and Tobago 80* 85* 9,000 52
 Yemen 83* 85 800 24.5
 Afghanistan 83* 84* 700 13.2
 Belize 83* 84* 15,960 56.1
 Colombia 88 84 5,490 44.2
 Federated States of Micronesia 84* 84* 6,150 48.4
 Iran 84 84 6,690 40.2
 Jordan 87* 84 4,180 43.4
 Marshall Islands 84 84 1,600 44.2
 Morocco 85 84 2,000 39.9
 Pakistan 81* 84 3,730 31.7
 Panama 84* 84* 1,960 26.2
 Paraguay 85* 84 6,060 56.6
 Puerto Rico 84 84 4,590 45.2
 Saudi Arabia 83* 84* 15,800 63.6
 Solomon Islands 84* 84* 12,660 44.1
 The Bahamas 78* 84* 1,590 41.5
 United Arab Emirates 83* 84* 24,030 48.8
 Vanuatu 84* 84* 2,850 31.4
 Venezuela 88* 84 5,220 47.4
 Algeria 84* 83* 5,530 39.9
 Bahrain 83* 83* 16,190 49.3
 Libya 84* 83* 7,570 49.3
 Oman 83* 83* 13,000 40.6
 Papua New Guinea 84* 83 2,180 38.4
 Syria 87* 83 5,348 38.9
 Tunisia 84* 83* 6,440 40.6
 Bangladesh 81* 82* 1,720 29.8
 Dominican Republic 84* 82 6,270 46.8
 India 81 82 2,650 36.3
 Lebanon 86 82 4,600 55.8
 Madagascar 79* 82 730 28.6
 Egypt 83 81 3,810 37.3
 Honduras 84* 81 2,540 41.9
 Maldives 81* 81* 4,798 38.5
 Nicaragua 84* 81* 2,350 41.3
 Northern Mariana Islands N/A 81 12,500 51.3
 Barbados 78 80 14,660 60.9
 Bhutan 78* 80* 1,969 24.1
 El Salvador 84* 80* 4,790 42.6
 Guatemala 79 79 4,040 34.6
 Sri Lanka 81* 79 3,510 47.7
   Nepal 78 78 1,370 26.9
 Qatar 78 78 19,844 45.6
 Comoros 79* 77* 1,640 24.6
 Cape Verde 78* 76* 4,920 40.5
 Mauritania 73* 76* 1,790 20.5
 Uganda 73 73 1,360 25.4
 Kenya 72 72 1,010 27.3
 South Africa 72 72 9,810 38.3
 Tanzania 72 72 580 23.2
 Ghana 71 71 2,080 33.7
 Grenada 75* 71* 6,600 45.3
 Jamaica 72 71 3,680 46.5
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 75* 71 5,190 48.4
 Sudan 72 71 1,740 24.6
 Zambia 77 71 800 21.8
 Antigua and Barbuda 75* 70* 10,390 53.2
 Benin 69* 70* 1,060 20.5
 Botswana 72* 70* 7,740 29.4
 Namibia 72* 70* 6,880 31.1
 Rwanda 70* 70* 1,260 18.5
 Togo 69* 70* 1,450 26
 Burundi 70* 69* 630 15.2
 Côte d'Ivoire 71* 69* 1,450 18.1
 Malawi 71* 69* 570 24.3
 Mali 68* 69* 840 13.4
 Niger 67* 69* 800 13.5
 Nigeria 67 69 800 27.3
 Angola 69* 68* 1,840 13.7
 Burkina Faso 66* 68* 1,090 10.7
 Chad 72* 68* 1,010 20.4
 Djibouti 68* 68* 2,040 22
 Eritrea 68* 68* 1,040 21.4
 Somalia 68* 68* 500 15.2
 Swaziland 72* 68* 4,730 22.2
 Dominica 75* 67 4,960 48.8
 Guinea 63 67 2,060 22.5
 Guinea-Bissau 63* 67* 680 20.3
 Haiti 72* 67* 1,610 20.4
 Lesotho 72* 67* 2,970 24.3
 Liberia 64* 67* 1,000 21.2
 Saint Kitts and Nevis 75* 67* 10,750 45.5
 São Tomé and Príncipe 59* 67* 1,317 37.9
 Senegal 64* 66* 1,660 20.7
 The Gambia 64* 66* 1,540 21.3
 Zimbabwe 66 66 2,180 25.2
 Republic of the Congo 73 65 630 17.9
 Cameroon 70* 64 1,910 23.1
 Central African Republic 68* 64 1,170 19.1
 Democratic Republic of the Congo 65 64 700 26.9
 Ethiopia 63 64 780 16.7
 Gabon 66* 64* 5,530 32.2
 Mozambique 72* 64 990 18
 Sierra Leone 64 64 500 13.8
 Saint Lucia 75* 62 4,950 51.1
 Equatorial Guinea 59 59 9,100 30.4

See also

Book's Publisher

Theories of Race and Intelligence:

Publications of Race and Intelligence:

Theories of other Intelligence links:

External links

References

  1. ^ Richard Lynn and Tatu Vanhanen (2006). IQ and Global Inequality. Washington Summit Publishers: Augusta, GA. ISBN 1593680252
  2. ^ Lynn, R. and Vanhanen, T. (2002). IQ and the wealth of nations. Westport, CT: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-97510-X
  3. "Relevance of education and intelligence at the national level for politics: Democracy, rule of law and political liberty" (PDF). Paper by Heiner Rindermann.
  4. "Intelligence, Human Capital, and Economic Growth: A Bayesian Averaging of Classical Estimates (BACE) Approach". Paper by Garett Jones and W. Joel Schneider.
  5. Älykkyyden tabu murtuu? Review by J.P. Roos in Sosiologia 3/2007.
  6. ^ Review by J.Philippe Rushton in Personality and Individual Differences, 2006, 41, 983-5. http://www.rlynn.co.uk/index.php?page=richard-lynn-and-tatu-vanhanen-iq-and-global-inequality-2006
  7. ^ Wicherts, J. M., et al., A systematic literature review of the average IQ of Sub-Saharan Africans, Intelligence (2009), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2009.05.002
  8. ^ Nisbett, Richard. 2009. Intelligence and how to get it. pp. 215.
  9. "The average IQ of sub-Saharan Africans: Comments on Wicherts, Dolan, and van der Maas", Richard Lynna and Gerhard Meisenberg, Intelligence, Volume 38, Issue 1, January-February 2010, Pages 21-29 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2009.09.009
  10. Relevance of education and intelligence for the political development of nations: Democracy, rule of law and political liberty, Heiner Rindermann, Intelligence, Volume 36, Issue 4, July-August 2008, Pages 306-322, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2007.09.003
  11. National differences in intelligence, crime, income, and skin color, J. Philippe Rushton and Donald I. Templer, Intelligence, Volume 37, Issue 4, July-August 2009, Pages 341-346, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2009.04.003
  12. Average intelligence predicts atheism rates across 137 nations, Richard Lynn, John Harvey, and Helmuth Nyborg, Intelligence, Volume 37, Issue 1, January-February 2009, Pages 11-15, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2008.03.004
  13. IQ, cultural values, and the technological achievement of nations, Garry A. Gelade, Intelligence, Volume 36, Issue 6, November-December 2008, Pages 711-718, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2008.04.003
  14. Relevance of education and intelligence at the national level for health: The case of HIV and AIDS, Heiner Rindermann and Gerhard Meisenbergb, Intelligence, Volume 37, Issue 4, July-August 2009, Pages 383-395, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2009.03.005
  15. Journal of Biosocial Science (2009), 41:519-535 Cambridge University Press, Wealth, Intelligence, Politics and Global Fertility Differentials, http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=5794948
  16. Rindermann, Heiner: The g-factor of international cognitive ability comparisons: the homogeneity of results in PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS and IQ-tests across nations. European Journal of Personality 21 (2007) 667-706
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