罗宾汉指数根据负数和等价收入进行调整

IF 0.5 4区 数学 Q4 SOCIAL SCIENCES, MATHEMATICAL METHODS Journal of Official Statistics Pub Date : 2021-12-01 DOI:10.2478/jos-2021-0044
Marion van den Brakel, R. Lok
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引用次数: 2

摘要

关于收入和财富不平等的无可争辩的数字对政治、社会和科学都是不可或缺的。尽管基尼系数是衡量不平等的最常见指标,但罗宾汉指数的简单概念(即必须从富人转移到穷人才能让每个人都过上同样富裕的收入份额)使其成为对公众更具吸引力的指标。在具有许多负值的分布中,尤其是财富分布中,罗宾汉指数的值可能大于1,这表明直觉上不可能实现超过100%的收入转移。本文提出了一种对罗宾汉指数进行归一化的方法。与原始索引相比,标准化的Robin Hood索引总是取0到1之间的值,并最终在没有负数的分布中作为原始索引。由于不平等措施通常适用于等价收入,我们还引入了一种在(标准化)罗宾汉指数框架内将等价收入从富人充分转移到穷人的方法。一个实证应用显示了罗宾汉指数的归一化效果,并将其与先前研究中基尼系数的归一化进行了比较。
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The Robin Hood Index Adjusted for Negatives and Equivalised Incomes
Abstract Indisputable figures on income and wealth inequality are indispensable for politics, society and science. Although the Gini coefficient is the most common measure of inequality, the straightforward concept of the Robin Hood index (namely, the income share that has to be transferred from the rich to the poor to make everyone equally well off) makes it a more attractive measure for the general public. In a distribution with many negative values – particularly wealth distributions – the Robin Hood index can take on values larger than 1, indicating an intuitively impossible income transfer of more than 100%. This article proposes a method to normalise the Robin Hood index. In contrast to the original index, the normalised Robin Hood index always takes on values between 0 and 1 and ends up as the original index in a distribution without negatives. As inequality measures are commonly applied to equivalised income, we also introduce a method for adequately transferring equivalised incomes from the rich to the poor within the framework of the (normalised) Robin Hood index. An empirical application shows the effect of normalisation for the Robin Hood index, and compares it to the normalisation of the Gini coefficient from previous research.
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来源期刊
Journal of Official Statistics
Journal of Official Statistics STATISTICS & PROBABILITY-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
39
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: JOS is an international quarterly published by Statistics Sweden. We publish research articles in the area of survey and statistical methodology and policy matters facing national statistical offices and other producers of statistics. The intended readers are researchers or practicians at statistical agencies or in universities and private organizations dealing with problems which concern aspects of production of official statistics.
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