Tall tales and short shrift.
Dan Akst's post on height opens up one of the
most intriguing topics in social science -- not the well-established fact that
tall people earn more than short people but why this is so. The authors of the
National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) study he cites say it's because tall
people have been more likely to have reached their full cognitive development --
in other words, their IQs grew faster, too.
But that can't be the whole explanation. The world's leading scholar of height,
whose work tends to support their hypothesis, is John Komlos of the University
of Munich. His life story recently appeared in the New Yorker. He is one of the
rare Americans to have his own institute at one of Germany's premier
universities. At 5 feet 7, probably as a result of wartime and postwar
malnutrition under Hungary's totalitarian regimes (his family emigrated after
the 1956 revolution), Komlos developed such a powerful interest in the
determinants of stature that he virtually created it as a subdiscipline. His
disadvantage, contrary to the NBER paper, probably promoted his cognitive
development.
The sociologist Irving Goffman was one of the highest paid members of his
discipline and liked to boast that his royalties and investments each were at
least equal to his salary. (Among other things, he had qualified as a blackjack
dealer and pit boss in a Las Vegas casino, according to colleagues.) His former
graduate student, Gary Marx, remembered him:
As a Canadian Jew of short stature working at the margins (or perhaps better,
frontiers) of a marginal discipline, he was clearly an outsider. His brilliance
and marginality meant an acute eye and a powerful imagination. He had a
fascination with other people's chutzpah, weirdness and perhaps even
degradation. He appreciated people who had a good thing going and those able to
assert themselves in the face of what could be an oppressive social structure
and culture. In a stodgy, timid, bureaucratic world the hustler has a certain
freshness and perverse appeal.
In his book Stigma (1963), Goffman observed that there is "only one completely
unblushing male in America: a young, married, white, urban, northern,
heterosexual, Protestant father of good complexion, weight, height, and a recent
record in sports" Such men might become CEOs more often than others, but they're
less likely to excel in other well-paid endeavors -- stand-up comedy, among
other things -- where skills honed in childhood can flourish.
On the social level, studies are linking height with well-being, and diminishing
US physical (and possible economic and political) stature with rising
inequality. The credit for Northern European stature goes not to genes but to
the European welfare state, Komlos and his collaborators have suggested.. Here's
a new motto for the US's social democrats: "Grow Up, America!"
Paradoxically, though, as Europeans get taller they appear to be choosing
shorter leaders, or rather once more accepting the rule of assertive short
people. And while Barak Obama is several inches taller than John McCain, the
role of height in US politics has always been complex, or so I suggested during
the 2004 campaign, before George W. Bush neutralized the four-inch gap with John
Kerry.
See this paper (subscription possibly required) on the paradox that the effect
of height on income appears due to adolescent experience rather than to effects
of adult height. The white males in this study who were short in high school but
grew to normal or above-average height in later growth spurts had the same
disadvantages as those who remained short. So it's early social disadvantages,
including lower participation in team sports, rather than later discrimination
that is key. See also the excellent book of the science writer Stephen S. Hall,
Size Matters, reviewed here.
The lesson I draw: It's attitude, not altitude, that matters.