Research on IQ and its role in productivity and economic growth
Jones started his research on IQ in a paper with Joel Schneider in 2006 that argued that IQ is a statistically significantexplanatory variable of economic growth, thus agreeing broadly with the thesis advanced by Richard Lynn and Tatu Vanhanen in their book IQ and the Wealth of Nations. The chief observation that Jones made, and popularized, is that national IQs have much greater predictive power for individual earnings than individual IQ. Jones' further research has been on identifying the causal mechanisms by which IQ might affect productivity and economic growth at a national level. One mechanism posited by Jones is that smarter groups tend to be better at arriving at and enforcing norms of cooperation. Jones has used laboratory experiments involving repeated prisoner's dilemma, combined with the SAT scores of participants, to offer support for this hypothesis. He has also suggested that patience and delayed gratification might offer an explanation. Jones has argued that certain sectors requiring very high quality work and with very low error-tolerance can only exist and thrive given access to a high-IQ population, because in such sectors, it is not possible to replace a single high-IQ worker by multiple low-IQ workers and achieve the same output. Jones informally dubs such sectors "O-Ring sectors", in contrast to "foolproof sectors", where a larger workforce of people with lower productivity can produce the same output as a smaller workforce of people with high productivity. Jones offers a summary of his and others' research on the relationship between IQ and national productivity in an article for The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics.
Research on money
Some of Jones' research has focused on the role of money, monetary policy, and mechanisms to reduce the risk of financial crisis.
Books
Jones wrote the book Hive Mind: How Your Nation's IQ Matters So Much More Than Your Own, which builds on his research on the relationship between IQ and national productivity. It was released in November 2015 by Stanford University Press. He was the editor of the book Banking Crises, produced for The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics. His book 10% Less Democracy: How Less Voting Could Mean Better Governance, was published on 7 February 2020. It is based on a 2015 presentation.