TL;DR
This paper uses a simple agent-based model to demonstrate that luck often plays a more significant role than talent in achieving high success, challenging meritocratic assumptions and suggesting policy implications.
Contribution
It quantifies how randomness influences success, showing that less talented but luckier individuals often outperform more talented ones, a novel insight into success dynamics.
Findings
Luck can outweigh talent in success outcomes.
Most highly talented individuals do not reach the highest success levels.
Policy strategies can be optimized to enhance meritocracy and diversity.
Abstract
The largely dominant meritocratic paradigm of highly competitive Western cultures is rooted on the belief that success is due mainly, if not exclusively, to personal qualities such as talent, intelligence, skills, efforts or risk taking. Sometimes, we are willing to admit that a certain degree of luck could also play a role in achieving significant material success. But, as a matter of fact, it is rather common to underestimate the importance of external forces in individual successful stories. It is very well known that intelligence or talent exhibit a Gaussian distribution among the population, whereas the distribution of wealth - considered a proxy of success - follows typically a power law (Pareto law). Such a discrepancy between a Normal distribution of inputs, with a typical scale, and the scale invariant distribution of outputs, suggests that some hidden ingredient is at work…
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