Summary
- I estimate there is a correlation of 85.4 % across countries in 2019 between the real GDP and population with IQ higher than the global mean. This is stronger than the correlation of 78.4 % between the real GDP and total population.
- Among the 20 countries with the largest real GDP, the population with IQ higher than the global mean will increase the most for India (53.5 M), the United States (39.4 M), and Indonesia (15.7 M).
Acknowledgements
Thanks to alsilverback from Batonics AB.
Methods
I determined the population with an IQ above a given z-score of the global distribution assuming (see tab “Population by IQ” of this Sheet):
- 2019 population data by country from Our World in Data (see tab “Population”).
- The mean IQ globally and of each country from Table 16 of Lynn 2019, and coefficient of variation of 15 %[1] (see tabs “Global IQ” and “IQ by country”).
To my knowledge, Lynn 2019 is the best source of IQ data by country, but it arguably does not differ much from other good sources. The correlation coefficient for the relationship between the mean IQ by country from Lynn 2019 and WordData is 88.7 %[2] (see M2 of tab “IQ by country”).
I selected data from The World Bank for the total and per capita real GDP in 2019 by country (see tab “Real GDP”).
Results and discussion
The table below contains the correlation coefficients for the relationships across countries in 2019 between the real GDP and the real GDP per capita, population, mean IQ, total IQ[3], population with an IQ higher than various z-scores of the global distribution, and total IQ of top half.
Relationship between the real GDP in 2019 and… | Correlation coefficient (R) (%) | |
---|---|---|
Real GDP per capita in 2019 | 13.1 | |
Population in 2019 | 78.4 | |
Mean IQ | 24.3 | |
Total IQ in 2019 | 82.7 | |
Population in 2019 with an IQ higher than… | 3 standard deviations below the global mean | 78.5 |
2 standard deviations below the global mean | 80.0 | |
1 standard deviation below the global mean | 84.9 | |
The global mean | 85.4 | |
1 standard deviation above the global mean | 80.0 | |
2 standard deviations above the global mean | 76.1 | |
3 standard deviations above the global mean | 73.3 | |
Total IQ of top half | 84.0 |
The population with IQ higher than the global mean is the strongest predictor of the real GDP (R = 85.4 %), better than the population alone (R = 78.4 %). Consequently, I think it may be interesting to analyse how the former will evolve. The following table presents, for the 20 countries with the largest real GDP[4], the absolute and relative variation from 2019 to 2050 of the population with IQ higher than the global mean, assuming the same parameters from Lynn 2019 for the IQ distributions.
Country[5] | Variation from 2019 to 2050 in the population with IQ higher than the global mean | |
---|---|---|
Absolute (M) | Relative (%) | |
China | -27.5 | -1.92 |
United States | 39.4 | 12.0 |
India | 53.5 | 3.92 |
Japan | -18.9 | -14.9 |
Germany | -2.85 | -3.41 |
Russia | -7.65 | -5.25 |
Indonesia | 15.7 | 5.82 |
United Kingdom | 5.31 | 7.87 |
Brazil | 7.47 | 3.54 |
France | 1.89 | 2.90 |
Mexico | 15.2 | 11.9 |
Turkey | 7.18 | 8.61 |
South Korea | -3.76 | -7.35 |
Spain | -2.21 | -4.72 |
Canada | 6.75 | 18.0 |
Saudi Arabia | 2.05 | 5.99 |
Thailand | -2.15 | -3.09 |
Poland | -3.50 | -9.25 |
Australia | 6.19 | 24.5 |
Iran | 6.22 | 7.50 |
Amongst these 20 counties, the 3 whose population with IQ higher than the global mean is predicted to have the largest:
- Absolute variation are India (53.5 M), the United States (39.4 M), and Indonesia (15.7 M).
- Relative variation are Australia (24.5 %), Canada (18.0 %), and the United States (12.0 %).
- ^
I set the coefficient of variation to 15 % because, according to Wikipedia:
For modern IQ tests, the raw score is transformed to a normal distribution with mean 100 and standard deviation 15.
- ^
However, note the values from WordData rely on many studies from Lynn:
The intelligence quotients by countries are taken from the studies conducted by Richard Lynn and Tatu Vanhanen (2002), Heiner Rindermann (2007), Khaleefa and Lynn (2008), Ahmad, Khanum and Riaz (2008), Lynn, Abdalla and Al-Shahomee (2008), Lynn and Meisenberg (2010), as well as the PISA tests in 2003, 2006 and 2009. More recent results were weighted higher. The studies are not entirely uncontroversial as they often consider only specific population groups or a few individuals per country. If, on the other hand, an average is obtained from all the tests and studies, a usable overview will be obtained.
- ^
The total IQ is the product between the mean IQ and population.
- ^
See tab “Population by IQ” for the full results.
- ^
Ordered from largest to smallest real GDP in 2019.
Can you say a little bit more about the point you are trying to make here? This could be an interesting, or on the other hand trivial, finding for a number of reasons, but I'm curious as to why you don't speculate on these reasons at all. I'm not sure this correlation is particularly compelling without discussion of why it exists.
Given you favourably cite Lynn, perhaps it is the case you believe in his conclusions regarding race itself determining IQ, and think this explains (at least part) of the effect. Perhaps you don't believe this. I think it behoves you, given the controversy regarding this work, to state your commitment (or lack thereof) to these ideas since your data source involves work conducted, arguably, to motivate this hypothesis.
Regardless, I think without further context it's very hard to interpret this evidence as favouring any particular theory: whether it be regarding race, education, culture, nutrition or any number of other factors.
It's also unclear to me why one would be interested in associating total IQ with GDP rather than average IQ with GDP per capita. Perhaps you could say something about that, if you've had any thoughts?
Thanks for clarifying.
I agree further engaging with the quality of the data would improve the post. However, this does not necessarily imply that I should have engaged more with the data. I had done this analysis for other purposes, and thought that posting this may be better than nothing. I should have tagged the post as "Personal blog" instead of the default "Front page" (... (read more)