A Depressing New Study Finds Being Short or Overweight Can Hurt Your Career Size does matter, as short men and overweight women face the largest backlash.

By Lindsay Friedman

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

While previous observational studies have found that taller men and thinner women are more successful and better off socio-economically, they simply proved these two factors are correlated.

But a new study published by the journal BMJ finds that height and weight has a causal relationship to pay and other status markers. In other words, overweight and short people face lower income and other social barriers because of their body mass and stature.

Related: Size does matter, as short men and overweight women face the largest backlash.

To determine this, researchers used genetic data from more than 119,000 British people between ages 37 to 73, focusing on genetic variants that predict height and BMI. Then, they examined participants status based on five factors, including degree level, employment and annual household income.

The researchers found that for each two-and-a-half-inch increase in height suggested by a male participants' genetics, he earned an average of $1,611 more a year, The New York Times reports. For women, an extra 4.6 BMI points meant, on average, they earned $4,200 less per year. (Unfairly if not surprisingly, high BMIs did not negatively impact the socio-economic status of men.)

Related: For the First Time, Promising News on the Obesity Front

"Using genetic information in this way avoids some of the problems that afflict observational studies, making the results less prone to bias and unmeasured confounding factors, and therefore more likely to be reliable," the authors wrote in the study

Lindsay Friedman

Staff writer. Frequently covers franchise news and food trends.

Lindsay Friedman is a staff writer at BIZ Experiences.com.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang Says He's 'Created More Billionaires' Than Anyone Else — Adding Two More This Week

Two more Nvidia leaders have crossed the threshold into billion-dollar fortunes — and they're still clocking into work.

Starting a Business

These Brothers Started a Business to Improve an Everyday Task. They Made Their First Products in the Garage — Now They've Raised Over $100 Million.

Coulter and Trent Lewis had an early research breakthrough that helped them solve for the right problem.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Business News

Here's How Meta's AI Superintelligence Effort Is Different From 'Others in the Industry,' According to Mark Zuckerberg's New Blog Post

In a letter published on Wednesday, the Meta CEO said that the company's goal is to bring personal superintelligence to everyone.

Growing a Business

If Email Is Your Main Strategy, You're Missing the Easiest Way to Build Authority

Most marketing emails don't get read, but businesses are still treating email as their primary relationship-building tool. It's time for a new approach.

Business News

'Ongoing Inflation Problem': Federal Reserve Holds Rates Steady for the Fifth-Straight Time

Experts tell BIZ Experiences that the data didn't justify a rate cut today — but September could tell a different story.