Lorenz curve
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The Lorenz curve is a graphical representation of the cumulative distribution function of a probability distribution; it is a graph showing the proportion of the distribution assumed by the bottom y% of the values. It is often used to represent income distribution, where it shows for the bottom x% of households, what percentage y% of the total income they have. The percentage of households is plotted on the x-axis, the percentage of income on the y-axis. It can also be used to show distribution of assets. In such uses, some political doctrines (e.g. socialism) consider it to represent social inequality. It was developed by Max O. Lorenz in 1905 for representing income distribution.
Explanation
Every point on the Lorenz curve represents a statement like "the bottom 20% of all households have 10% of the total income". A perfectly equal income distribution would be one in which every person has the same income. In this case, the bottom N% of society would always have N% of the income. This can be depicted by the straight line y = x; called the line of perfect equality or the 45° line.
By contrast, a perfectly unequal distribution would be one in which one person has all the income and everyone else has none. In that case, the curve would be at y = 0 for all x < 100%, and y = 100% when x = 100%. This curve is called the line of perfect inequality.
The Gini coefficient is the area between the line of perfect equality and the observed Lorenz curve, as a percentage of the area between the line of perfect equality and the line of perfect inequality.
Calculation
The Lorenz curve can often be represented by a function L(F), where F is represented by the horizontal axis, and L is represented by the vertical axis.For a population of size n, with a sequence of values yi, i = 1 to n, that are indexed in non-decreasing order ( yi ≤ yi+1), the Lorenz curve is the continuous piecewise linear function connecting the points ( Fi , Li ), i = 0 to n, where F0 = 0, L0 = 0, and for i = 1 to n:
- [F_i = i/n\,]
- [S_i = \Sigma_^i \; y_j\,]
- [L_i = S_i / S_n \, ]
- [F_i = \Sigma_^i \; f(y_j)\,]
- [S_i = \Sigma_^i \; f(y_j)\,y_j\,]
- [L_i = S_i / S_n \, ]
- [L(F(x))=\frac^ t\,f(t)\,dt}^\infty t\,f(t)\,dt}]
- [L(F)=\frac]
- x(F1) = inf
Properties
A Lorenz curve always starts at (0,0) and ends at (1,1).The Lorenz curve is not defined if the mean of the probability distribution is zero or infinite.
The Lorenz curve for a probability distribution is a continuous function. However, Lorenz curves representing discontinuous functions be constructed as the limit of Lorenz curves of probability distributions, the line of perfect inequality being an example.
If the variable being measured cannot take negative values, the Lorenz curve:
- cannot rise above the line of perfect equality,
- cannot sink below the line of perfect inequality,
- is increasing, and
- is a convex function.
If the variable being measured can take negative values and has a negative mean, then the Lorenz curve will be above the line of perfect equality, except at the end points, and is a concave function.
The Lorenz curve is invariant under positive scaling. If X is a random variable, for any positive number c the random variable c X has the same Lorenz curve as X.
The Lorenz curve is flipped twice, once about F = 0.5 and once about L = 0.5, by negation. If X is a random variable with Lorenz curve LX(F), then -X has the Lorenz curve:
- L -X = 1 - L X (1-F)
- [F - L_(F) = \frac ( F - L_X(F))\,]
- If the Lorenz curve is differentiable:
- :[\frac = \frac]
References
See also
- Distribution of wealth
- Welfare economics
- Income inequality metrics
- Gini coefficient
- Robin Hood index
- ROC analysis
- Social welfare (political science)
- Economic inequality
- Zipf's law
- Pareto distribution
- mean deviation
External links
- [Measuring income inequality: a new database], with link to dataset
- [Free Online Software (Calculator)] computes the Gini Coefficient, plots the Lorenz curve, and computes many other measures of concentration for any dataset
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