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Intelligent People Are More
Patient In Financial Matters
Assuming someone gave you the choice of 100 euros
today or 150 euros in a year's time. Which sum would you take?
Scientists at the University of Bonn and the Institute for the
Study of Labour (Institut zur Zukunft der Arbeit, IZA) asked 1000
adults in Germany this question. At the same time they measured
the cognitive abilities of the participants, using two different
methods. The result was that intelligent people prefer to wait
for a higher return, rather than going for the money now. This
is the first time that this relationship between intelligence
and patience in financial matters has been shown. Furthermore,
the willingness to run risks increases with higher intelligence.
Scientists gave the test subjects 100 euros. The participants could
put this amount straight into their pockets. However, they could
also invest it for a year at a guaranteed fixed rate of interest.
In this way the 100 euros would become, for example, 105, 120 or
150 euros. In an experiment the candidates were supposed to decide
what the minimum amount would have to be in a year's time for it
to be worth waiting longer for. The idea behind this was that the
more impatient someone is in waiting for payment, the higher the
incentive required must be in order for them to accept the 12-month
waiting period. Using a similar experiment the scientists ascertained
the willingness of the candidates to run risks. Apart from that
the test persons completed two different intelligence tests. "The
more intelligent the test subjects were, the more patient and tolerant
of risk they were," is how the Bonn Professor of Economics,
Dr. Armin Falk, sums the results up.
But is there really a direct relationship between cognitive abilities
and certain personality traits? Or is the relation more complicated?
It would also be conceivable that people with a low IQ earn less
money and tend to choose the 100 euros because of financial worries.
In conjunction with his colleagues Dr. Thomas Dohmen, Dr. Uwe
Sunde and Dr. David Huffman at the IZA, Professor Falk was able
to prove that the link between patience and cognitive abilities
is even valid if the income factor is taken into account. "What's
more, according to our analysis, other indirect factors of influence
can be excluded as an explanation," Professor Falk emphasises.
Intelligent people are rewarded twice over
Instead, intelligence, patience and risk tolerance seem to be
closely interconnected -- and probably for a good reason. In order
to be able to assess a risk correctly or to have a successful
strategy in the long term, it is necessary to be able to recognise
how things are interconnected. "Anyone who does not have
this ability may be better advised to follow the principle of
'A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush,'" Professor
Falk says.
However, someone who is intelligent seems to be twice favoured,
according to the results of the Bonn study. On the one hand, they
can be more successful, due to their cognitive abilities, than
their less intelligent contemporaries. On the other hand, they
are generally more tolerant of risk and more patient -- two character
traits which research shows contribute additionally to success
at the workplace.
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