Family Office
There's no relationship between smarts and wealth

So says one researcher, focused solely on financial data from
40-somethings. There is little connection between intelligence
and wealth. That's according to new study out of Ohio State
University's Center for Human Resource Research, which tested
over 7,400 Americans for intelligence in 1980 and then went back
and looked over their personal balance sheets in 2004.
People with higher than average IQs make more money than their
less intelligent compatriots, the study suggest -- for each IQ
point there's an income increase of between $202 and $616 a year.
But, by and large, they're no better at accumulating it than
those with lower IQs.
Not over yet
Viewing wealth as difference between personal assets and
liabilities, the ostensibly smarter folk were likelier to have
debts that nullified their advantage as earners.
"Your IQ has really no relationship to your wealth," says Jay
Zagorsky, author of the study and a researcher scientist at the
Center for Human Resource Research. "Being very smart does not
protect you from getting into financial difficulty."
Zagorsky says that other studies have made the link between IQ
and income, but his study is the first to examine the
relationship between intelligence, wealth and financial
difficulty.
It would be interesting to see the results of a follow-up study
in ten or 15 years, when the high-IQers have worked off the debt
they labor under now as people in the very early stages of middle
age.
By then it seems likely the higher earners might have put more
distance between themselves and the lower earners in terms of
overall wealth. -FWR
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