There is a vast literature on the selection of an appropriate index of income inequality and on what desirable properties such a measure (or index) should contain. The Gini index is, of course, the most popular. There is a concurrent literature on the use of hypothetical statistical distributions to approximate and describe an observed distribution of incomes. Pareto and others observed early on that incomes tend to be heavily right-tailed in their distribution. These asymmetries led to approximating the observed income distributions with extreme value hypothetical statistical distributions, such as the Pareto distribution. But these income distribution functions (IDFs) continue to be described with a single index (such as the Gini) ...
The Gini index is a summary statistic that measures how fairly a resource is distributed in a popula...
The original publication is available at www.springer.comThe purpose of this paper is to justify the...
This paper is concerned with the distribution of income and the problem of choosing summary measures...
There is a vast literature on the selection of an appropriate index of income inequality and on what...
International audienceWe examine the statistical performance of inequality indices in the presence o...
The Gini index underestimates inequality for heavy-tailed distributions: for example, a Pareto distr...
Classical measures of inequality use the mean as the benchmark of economic dispersion. They are not ...
In the present paper, we define and study one of the most popular indices which measures the inequal...
This article documents that the Gini index is an insufficient measure of inequality and, according t...
The inequality is computed through the so-called Gini index. The population is assumed to have the v...
The combination of the Lorenz curve and the Gini coefficient is a widely used tool for measuring in...
We examine the statistical performance of inequality indices in the presence of extreme values in th...
Abstract: A major aim of most income distribution studies is to make comparisons of income inequali...
To compare income and wealth distributions and to assess the effects of policy that affect those dis...
We examine the statistical performance of inequality indices in the presence of extreme values in th...
The Gini index is a summary statistic that measures how fairly a resource is distributed in a popula...
The original publication is available at www.springer.comThe purpose of this paper is to justify the...
This paper is concerned with the distribution of income and the problem of choosing summary measures...
There is a vast literature on the selection of an appropriate index of income inequality and on what...
International audienceWe examine the statistical performance of inequality indices in the presence o...
The Gini index underestimates inequality for heavy-tailed distributions: for example, a Pareto distr...
Classical measures of inequality use the mean as the benchmark of economic dispersion. They are not ...
In the present paper, we define and study one of the most popular indices which measures the inequal...
This article documents that the Gini index is an insufficient measure of inequality and, according t...
The inequality is computed through the so-called Gini index. The population is assumed to have the v...
The combination of the Lorenz curve and the Gini coefficient is a widely used tool for measuring in...
We examine the statistical performance of inequality indices in the presence of extreme values in th...
Abstract: A major aim of most income distribution studies is to make comparisons of income inequali...
To compare income and wealth distributions and to assess the effects of policy that affect those dis...
We examine the statistical performance of inequality indices in the presence of extreme values in th...
The Gini index is a summary statistic that measures how fairly a resource is distributed in a popula...
The original publication is available at www.springer.comThe purpose of this paper is to justify the...
This paper is concerned with the distribution of income and the problem of choosing summary measures...