NEW YORK - While researchers
have long shown that tall people earn more than their shorter counterparts, it's
not only social discrimination that accounts for this inequality -- tall people
are just smarter than their height-challenged peers, a new study finds.
 Los Angeles Lakers
guard Kobe Bryant (R) and Phoenix Sun's guard Steve Nash (L) both reach
for a rebound during Game 6 of their NBA Western Conference first round
playoff series in Los Angeles, California, in this May 4, 2006 file photo.
While researchers have long shown that tall people earn more than their
shorter counterparts, it's not only social discrimination that accounts
for this inequality -- tall people are just smarter than their
height-challenged peers, a new study finds.
[Reuters]
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"As early as age three -- before
schooling has had a chance to play a role -- and throughout childhood, taller
children perform significantly better on cognitive tests," wrote Anne Case and
Christina Paxson of Princeton University in a paper published by the National
Bureau of Economic Research.
The findings were based primarily on two British studies that followed
children born in 1958 and 1970, respectively, through adulthood and a U.S. study
on height and occupational choice.
Other studies have pointed to low self-esteem, better health that accompanies
greater height, and social discrimination as culprits for lower pay for shorter
people.
But researchers Case and Paxson believe the height advantage in the job world
is more than just a question of image.
"As adults, taller individuals are more likely to select into higher paying
occupations that require more advanced verbal and numerical skills and greater
intelligence, for which they earn handsome returns," they wrote.
For both men and women in the United States and the United Kingdom, a height
advantage of four inches equated with a 10 percent increase in wages on average.
But the researchers said the differences in performance crop up long before
the tall people enter the job force. Prenatal care and the time between birth
and the age of 3 are critical periods for determining future cognitive ability
and height.
"The speed of growth is more rapid during this period than at any other
during the life course, and nutritional needs are greatest at this point," the
researchers wrote.
The research confirms previous studies that show that early nutrition is an
important predictor of intelligence and height.
"Prenatal care and prenatal nutrition are just incredibly important, even
more so than we already knew," Case said in an interview.
Since the study's data only included populations in the United Kingdom and
the United States, the findings could not be applied to other regions, Case
said.
And how tall are the researchers?
They are both about 5 feet 8 inches tall, well above the average height of 5
feet 4 inches for American women.
A copy of the paper can be found at http://papers.nber.org/papers/w12466.pdf.