Why are people taller today than yesterday?
Skeletons
and written records show that human beings today are inches taller than humans
just a century or two ago. And yet even today average heights vary among
different nationalities, even among genetically homogenous populations, like the
South Koreans and North Koreans. (South Koreans are taller.) John Komlos,
professor of economics at the University of Munich and a pioneer in studying
human well-being through history, explains what governs human height, and why
some populations are taller than others.
Q: Why are people taller today than yesterday?
A: There are two main reasons. One is that the diet has improved considerably.
In spite of some very negative aspects of the diet of industrialized
populations, we have much better vitamin, mineral and protein intake than 100 or
200 years ago. As a consequence the body can grow much better.
In addition, our health has improved considerably along with medical technology.
We have fewer endemic diseases, and fewer epidemic diseases. That is important
because an incidence of disease usually means that the nutrients we do consume
are not absorbed by the body sufficiently. Diseases lay a claim on our energy
intake, so that there is not enough left over for the body to grow. These two
factors play a considerable role.
We have been increasing in height for about 140 years. Prior to that, there were
cycles in height, depending on economic circumstances and agricultural
productivity and so forth. We were relatively tall in the Middle Ages, when
population densities were relatively low and food supplies were still fairly
adequate. The low point was in the 17th century. Frenchmen, for example, were
about 162 cm on average [not quite 5 ft. 4 in.], which is extremely small. Only
since about the middle of the 19th century has there been a general trend
upwards.
The American population was the tallest in the world from about the American
Revolution to World War II — that's a long time. (There is a genetic component
to [population] height, but there is very little genetic difference between
European populations or their overseas offshoots.) America had a very
resource-rich environment, with game, fish and wildlife. In fact we have data on
disadvantaged people in America, such as slaves. They were obviously among the
most mistreated populations in the world, but given the resource abundance — and
given the fact that the slave owners needed their work — they had to be fed
relatively decently. So slaves were taller than European peasants. It's no
wonder that Europeans were just flooding to America.
[Americans today are no longer the tallest people in the world.] After the
Second World War, many Western and Northern European countries began to adopt
certain favorable social policies. There is universal health insurance in most
of these societies — that, of course, makes a difference in health care. You can
also consider income inequality in America, since people who are at the low end
of the totem pole have considerable adversity making ends meet. I suspect the
difference [in height between Americans and Europeans] is due to both diet and
health care.