Most people agree that opportunities, jobs, and financial rewards should be earned rather than inherited. Americans particularly value this principle, given the nation's historical opposition to aristocratic privilege. A system distributing prestige and opportunity based on earned achievement is termed a meritocracy. When operating properly, such a system provides pathways for deserving individuals while efficiently allocating societal resources.
However, practice diverges from theory. Some individuals leverage social connections, charisma, privilege, or unethical tactics to bypass merit-based requirements. Consequently, many argue that modern meritocracies are fundamentally flawed—that numerous wealthy, powerful, and highly educated individuals haven't truly earned their positions. Critics like Sternberg (2012) contend the system is "fractured" because it rewards too limited a range of abilities, while others view meritocracy as entirely mythical. Many such critics identify standardized intelligence tests, particularly college admissions exams, as instruments perpetuating this false meritocracy.
Examining the Meritocracy
When analyzing social hierarchies, we should ask: Who gains from this arrangement? Obviously, those at the summit benefit most. In industrialized nations, these individuals typically possess advanced education, come from privileged backgrounds, belong to dominant cultural groups, and are frequently male. Critics argue these elites engineer systems cementing their advantages while erecting obstacles for others—particularly those lacking connections, financial resources, or belonging to marginalized communities.
Yet meritocracies can benefit broader society when they reward genuinely valuable characteristics like creativity, cooperation, and compassion. The benefits of such traits spread throughout communities rather than concentrating at the top. Theoretically, meritocracies simply reflect whichever traits and behaviors a culture chooses to incentivize.
Modern Western societies particularly reward intelligence. Consequently, positions of authority, prestige, and economic security disproportionately go to intelligent individuals. Society rewards high cognitive ability partly for economic reasons: intelligence is scarce, and supply-and-demand economics mean cognitively complex jobs command higher wages. Additionally, brighter students receive advanced educational opportunities, perform better on admissions tests, access more colleges, and are likelier to graduate—advantages in economies increasingly requiring degrees.
Importantly, these rewards don't result from deliberate attempts to establish intellectual hierarchies. Rather, they emerge from countless individual decisions about merit. Teachers offer honors courses to capable students; selective colleges admit bright applicants; employers hire competent workers. The intelligence-based meritocracy arises because individual differences exist in cognitive ability, intelligence correlates with beneficial outcomes, and many such outcomes receive financial rewards. This results not from conspiracy or oppression, but from distributed decisions about distributing opportunities and resources.
Downsides of the Intelligence Meritocracy
This explanation isn't an endorsement. The intellectual meritocracy has serious flaws. It encourages social fragmentation, as people increasingly associate with those of similar intelligence and economic status. Leaders become disconnected from average citizens' needs and challenges. Additionally, the system creates illusions that beneficiaries have earned their positions, when intelligence itself provides significant advantages—a genetic tailwind making cognitive challenges easier to overcome. Furthermore, because intelligence is heritable, the system becomes a partially inherited aristocracy, with social classes transmitting genetically across generations.
Seeking Alternatives
Given these drawbacks, alternatives deserve exploration. However, twentieth-century communist experiments failed to eliminate intelligence-based hierarchies. Another approach involves rewarding additional traits beyond cognitive ability. Yet the meritocracy already rewards multiple characteristics proportional to their workplace and academic contributions—motivation, conscientiousness, and ethical behavior all matter. Forcing organizations to ignore intelligence in favor of other traits creates inefficiency, social problems, and freedom restrictions, while fighting against the reality of individual differences.
No viable alternative can completely replace the intellectual meritocracy. It emerges inevitably from free societies and individual differences in valued traits. Rather than elimination, societies must determine which traits define merit and how much to reward them—a social and ethical question requiring recognition of meritocracy's nature, acknowledgment of individual differences, and engagement with stakeholders about their values and objectives.
From Chapter 24 of "In the Know: Debunking 35 Myths About Human Intelligence" by Dr. Russell Warne (2020)