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IQ IN THE PRODUCTION FUNCTION: EVIDENCE FROM IMMIGRANT EARNINGS

Garett JonesJones: Assistant Professor, Department of Economics and Center for Study of Public Choice, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA. Phone 314-973-7243, E-mail [email protected]W. Joel SchneiderSchneider: Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, Illinois State University, Normal, IL. Phone 309-438-8410, E-mail [email protected]
2010en
ABI

Аннотация

We show that a country’s average IQ score is a useful predictor of the wages that immigrants from that country earn in the United States, whether or not one adjusts for immigrant education. Just as in numerous microeconomic studies, 1 IQ point predicts 1% higher wages, suggesting that IQ tests capture an important difference in cross‐country worker productivity. In a cross‐country development accounting exercise, about one‐sixth of the global inequality in log income can be explained by the effect of large, persistent differences in national average IQ on the private marginal product of labor. This suggests that cognitive skills matter more for groups than for individuals. ( JEL J24, J61, O47)

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