Nornagest comments on Things I Wish They'd Taught Me When I Was Younger: Why Money Is Awesome - Less Wrong
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Adults?
It is well-known that a bunch of things (e.g. iodine deficiency) will suppress your IQ. And yes, there are (genetically) bright kids made stupid by their environment (deficiencies, malnutrition, trauma, etc.) and in a counterfactual universe where these deficiencies don't happen the kids would grow up to have higher IQ.
But almost all of IQ suppression happens in childhood and I don't know of "single heath care interventions" which would raise the IQ of an adult from 80 to 120.
What kind of interventions do you have in mind?
You consider that plausible based on what evidence?
Think e.g. about the economic effect of converting the stupid part of some country's population to smart people. It is enormous and would completely dwarf the 20Bn price which is what, a rounding error in the US Federal Budget?
Rounding error or not, it's not easy to get research funding in that kind of quantity. $20bn is about twice the annual budgets of Stanford, MIT, and Caltech (including the JPL) put together, or about NASA's annual budget (in late 2000s dollars) at the peak of the Apollo program; we're basically talking in terms of creating a major research university out of thin air and devoting it to one problem for two decades. I don't think it's unreasonable to suggest that you could develop some quite interesting things with that level of resources, although I'm not neuroscientist enough to speak of intelligence research as such.
In any case, contingent on such a program existing, I think I'd expect its bottom line to be dominated by implementation costs, not R&D. Education on a mass scale isn't cheap. Neither are most medical procedures.