It's not just how free the market is. Some economists are looking at  another factor that determines how much a country's economy flourishes:  how smart its people are. For a study published in an upcoming issue of Psychological Science,  researchers analysed test scores from 90 countries and found that the  intelligence of the people, particularly the smartest 5%, made a big  contribution to the strength of their economies.
In the last 50 years or so, economists have started taking an interest  in the value of human capital. That means all of the qualities of the  people who make up the workforce. Heiner Rindermann, of the Chemnitz  University of Technology, wanted to look more closely at human capital,  and particularly the factor that psychologists call cognitive ability.  "In other words, it's the ability of a person to solve a problem in the  most efficient way - not with violence, but by thinking," Rindermann  says. He wrote the new study with James Thompson of University College  London.
Research demographic
The researchers collected information on 90 countries, from the US to  New Zealand and Colombia to Kazakhstan. They also collected data on the  country's excellence in science and technology - the number of patents  granted per person and how many Nobel Prizes the country's people had  won in science, for example.
They found that intelligence made a difference in gross domestic  product. For each one-point increase in a country's average IQ, the per  capita GDP was $229 higher. It made an even bigger difference if the  smartest 5% of the population got smarter; for every additional IQ point  in that group, a country's per capita GDP was $468 higher.
Intelligence linked to economy
"Within a society, the level of the most intelligent people is  important for economic productivity," Rindermann says. He thinks that's  because "they are relevant for technological progress, for innovation,  for leading a nation, for leading organisations, as entrepreneurs, and  so on." Since Adam Smith, many economists have assumed that the main  thing you need for a strong economy is a government that stays out of  the way. "I think in the modern economy, human capital and cognitive  ability are more important than economic freedom," Rindermann says. -  (EurekAlert!, March 2011)
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