Study says that tall people prefer
conservative political parties
Want to know which political party an individual will
support? Then take note of the person’s height. The taller a person is,
the more likely he or she is to support candidates from a conservative
political party and actually vote for them, says a new study. The study,
conducted by Sara Watson, Assistant Professor at The Ohio State University,
along with Raj Arunachalam, senior economist at Bates White LLC economic
consulting firm, found that a one-inch increase in height raised support for
the Conservative Party by 0.6 per cent and the likelihood of voting for the
party by 0.5 per cent. The authors discovered that the link between height
and political views occurred in both men and women, but was roughly twice as
strong for men. For men, each additional inch of height generates a 0.8 per
cent increase in the likelihood of Conservative support, whereas for women the
effect is 0.4 per cent.
The researchers used data from the 2006 British Household
Panel Study, a survey which includes self-reported height, detailed income data
and a number of questions about political beliefs for just over 9,700
adults. ‘The results aren’t as strange as they might appear. Many studies
have found that taller people generally earn more income than do shorter people
and researchers have thought income could be linked to voting,’ said Watson in
the study published in theBritish Journal of Political Science. The
findings stood up even after the researchers performed more detailed analyses
to investigate whether the effect of height on political beliefs could be
explained through other channels, including race, years of schooling, marital
status and religion.
‘It was important to us to figure out if the effect of
height on voting could be explained by factors that have nothing to do with
income,’ Watson added. In a second part of the study, the researchers used
height as an ‘instrumental variable’ strategy to assess the relationship
between income and voting. ‘Height is useful in this context because it
predicts income well. Because we only expect height to affect political
behaviour through income, we can use it to investigate the effect of income on
voting,’ Watson said.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
18.08.2016
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