The generalized entropy index has been proposed as a measure of income inequality in a population.[1] It is derived from information theory as a measure of redundancy in data. In information theory a measure of redundancy can be interpreted as non-randomness or data compression; thus this interpretation also applies to this index. In addition, interpretation of biodiversity as entropy has also been proposed leading to uses of generalized entropy to quantify biodiversity.[2]
Formula
editThe formula for general entropy for real values of is:
(For the ge named “ge(alpha)”, where “alpha” represents an integer:
The 2nd formula below is for ge(1), also called “Theil-T”.
The 3rd formula below is for ge(0), also called Theil-L”.
The 1st formula below is for ge(alpha), for all integer alpha other than 0 & 1.)
where N is the number of cases (e.g., households or families), is the income for case i and is a parameter which regulates the weight given to distances between incomes at different parts of the income distribution. For large the index is especially sensitive to the existence of large incomes, whereas for small the index is especially sensitive to the existence of small incomes.
An Atkinson index for any inequality aversion parameter can be derived from a generalized entropy index under the restriction that - i.e. an Atkinson index with high inequality aversion is derived from a GE index with small . Moreover, it is the unique class of inequality measures that is a monotone transformation of the Atkinson index and which is additive decomposable. Many popular indices, including Gini index, do not satisfy additive decomposability.[1][3]
The formula for deriving an Atkinson index with inequality aversion parameter under the restriction is given by:
Note that the generalized entropy index has several income inequality metrics as special cases. For example, GE(0) is the mean log deviation, GE(1) is the Theil index, and GE(2) is half the squared coefficient of variation.
See also
edit- Atkinson index
- Gini coefficient
- Hoover index (a.k.a. Robin Hood index)
- Income inequality metrics
- Lorenz curve
- Rényi entropy
- Suits index
- Theil index
References
edit- ^ a b Shorrocks, A. F. (1980). "The Class of Additively Decomposable Inequality Measures". Econometrica. 48 (3): 613–625. doi:10.2307/1913126. JSTOR 1913126.
- ^ Pielou, E.C. (December 1966). "The measurement of diversity in different types of biological collections". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 13: 131–144. Bibcode:1966JThBi..13..131P. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(66)90013-0.
- ^ STEPHEN, JENKINS. "CALCULATING INCOME DISTRIBUTION INDICES FROM MICRO-DATA" (PDF). National Tax Journal. University of Oregon.