Is one distribution (of income, consumption, or some other economic variable) among families or individuals more or less equal in relative terms than another? Despite the seeming straightforwardness of this question, there has been and continues to be considerable debate over how to go about finding the answer. There are two points of contention. One is the issue of cardinality vs. ordinality. Practitioners of the cardinal approach compare distributions by means of summary measures such as a Gini coefficient, variance of logarithms, and the like. For purposes of ranking the relative inequality of two distributions, the cardinality of the usual measures is not only a source of controversy, but it is also redundant. Accordingly, some research...
Classical measures of inequality use the mean as the benchmark of economic dispersion. They are not ...
Economic literature on inequality measurement is mainly concerned with the comparison of univariate ...
Relative or absolute dominanœ in the sense of Lorenz an international comparison A distribution dom...
When measuring health inequality using ordinal data, analysts typically must choose between indices ...
Financial support by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through grant ECO2008-04756 and ...
La Mesure des Inégalités Ordinales et MultidimensionnellesCHALLENGING INEQUALITIES: A INDO-EUROPEAN ...
[Excerpt] The comparison of alternative patterns of family income distribution, as in most social we...
We consider the problem of ranking distributions of opportunity sets on the basis of equality. First...
This paper is concerned with the distribution of income and the problem of choosing summary measures...
Comparison of two populations with respect to their income inequalities is an important topic in eco...
The combination of the Lorenz curve and the Gini coefficient is a widely used tool for measuring in...
This paper establishes foundational equivalences between alternative criteria for comparing distribu...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
© The Author(s) 2010. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.comThis paper is co...
Abstract: A major aim of most income distribution studies is to make comparisons of income inequali...
Classical measures of inequality use the mean as the benchmark of economic dispersion. They are not ...
Economic literature on inequality measurement is mainly concerned with the comparison of univariate ...
Relative or absolute dominanœ in the sense of Lorenz an international comparison A distribution dom...
When measuring health inequality using ordinal data, analysts typically must choose between indices ...
Financial support by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through grant ECO2008-04756 and ...
La Mesure des Inégalités Ordinales et MultidimensionnellesCHALLENGING INEQUALITIES: A INDO-EUROPEAN ...
[Excerpt] The comparison of alternative patterns of family income distribution, as in most social we...
We consider the problem of ranking distributions of opportunity sets on the basis of equality. First...
This paper is concerned with the distribution of income and the problem of choosing summary measures...
Comparison of two populations with respect to their income inequalities is an important topic in eco...
The combination of the Lorenz curve and the Gini coefficient is a widely used tool for measuring in...
This paper establishes foundational equivalences between alternative criteria for comparing distribu...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
© The Author(s) 2010. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.comThis paper is co...
Abstract: A major aim of most income distribution studies is to make comparisons of income inequali...
Classical measures of inequality use the mean as the benchmark of economic dispersion. They are not ...
Economic literature on inequality measurement is mainly concerned with the comparison of univariate ...
Relative or absolute dominanœ in the sense of Lorenz an international comparison A distribution dom...