The Wonder of International Adoption: Adult IQ in Sweden By Bryan Caplan

In Selfish Reasons to Have More Kids, I showed that nurture effects are small within the First World. But I also freely conceded that the nurture effects of growing up outside the First World are probably large:

The most important weakness of behavioral genetics, though, is simply that research focuses on middle-class families in First World countries. The results might not generalize. Twin and adoption studies almost never look at people in Third World countries. So you shouldn’t conclude that Haitian orphans would turn out the same way if raised in Sweden. […] Twin and adoption research only show that families have little long-run effect inside the First World. Bringing kids to the First World often saves their lives. Over 13 percent of the children in Malawi–the African nation than initially denied Madonna’s petition to adopt a four-year-old orphan–don’t survive their first five years. And survival is only the beginning. Life in the First World spares children from hunger, disease, and harsh labor, and opens vast opportunities that most of us take for granted. Merely moving an adult Nigerian to the United States multiplies his wage about fifteen times. Imagine the benefit of giving a Nigerian child an American childhood and an American education.



During the last month, I’ve delved much more deeply into this subject. As you might expect, there is a sizable literature on the effects of international adoption. The evidence on physical benefits is strong and clear-cut. Toddlers adopted from the Third World are tragically below normal on height, weight, and head circumference on arrival. (d is effect size in standard deviations). Within eight years, however, these adoptees close about 75% of height and weight deficits and about 35% of the head circumference deficit.

But what about intellectual benefits? Average IQs in Third World countries are quite low – mid-to-high 80s for Latin America, mid-80s for the Middle East, low-80s for South Asia, 70s or even lower for sub-Saharan Africa.

Before we turn to the evidence, however, there’s a major complication. In the First World, children adopted by smarter parents get somewhat higher IQ scores. Unfortunately, these benefits fade-out by adulthood. Me again:

Twin and adoption research on young children’s intelligence always finds nurture effects. The younger the child, the more parents matter. A team of prominent behavioral geneticists looked at major adoption studies of IQ. They found moderate nurture effects for children, versus none for adults. Suppose an adoptee grows up in a family with a biological child at the 80th percentile of IQ. During his childhood, we should expect the adoptee to have a higher IQ than 58 percent of his peers. Nurture effects were largest for the youngest kids under observation, four-to six-year-olds. An average child of this age raised in a high-IQ home will typically test higher than 63 percent of his peers. Not bad–but it doesn’t last.

The upshot is that measuring the IQs of Third World adoptees when they’re children isn’t very informative. Even if they show large gains, the gains could easily be fleeting. Instead, we should wait and measure those kids’ IQs when they’re adults.