Title: Inequality: Advanced Topics
1Inequality Advanced Topics
- Inequality and Poverty Measurement
- Technical University of Lisbon
- Frank Cowell
- http//darp.lse.ac.uk/lisbon2006
July 2006
2Overview...
Inequality Advanced Topics
Introduction
Themes and methodology
Deprivation
Deprivation
Complaints
3Purpose of lecture
- We will look at recent theoretical developments
in distributional analysis - Consider some linked themes
- alternative approaches to inequality
- related welfare concepts
- Use ideas from sociology and philosophy
- Focus on the way modern methodology is applied
4Overview...
Deprivation, complaints, inequality
Introduction
An alternative approach
Deprivation
Deprivation
Complaints
5Responsibility
- Standard approach to case for redistribution
- Use reference point of equality
- How effective is tax/benefit system in moving
actual distribution toward reference point? - Does not take account of individual
responsibility - Role of individual actions
- The responsibility cut
- Dworkin (1981a, 1981b)
- Distinguish between
- things that are your fault
- things for which you deserve compensation
6Responsibility and redistribution
- Should affect the evaluation of distributions
- Both case for redistribution...
- ... and effectiveness of taxation.
- Need to differentiate between
- characteristics for which people can be held
responsible - characteristics for which people should not
- Assume that these characteristics are known and
agreed...
7Basic structure
- Each person i has a vector of attributes ai
- Attributes partitioned into two classes
- R-attributes for which the individual is
responsible - C-attributes for which the individual may be
compensated - Situation before intervention
- Determined by income function f
- f maps attributes into incomes f(ai)
- Only person is attributes involved
- Situation after intervention
- Determined by distribution rule F
- Has similar flavour to claims problem
8Distribution rule
- The rule F
- depends on whole profile of attributes
- maps the attributes into income of i.
- Assume feasibility
Profile of attributes
- Also assume that the rule F is anonymous
- But what other principles should the rule F
satisfy?
9Responsibility Principle EIER
- Bossert and Fleurbaey (1996)
- Equal Income for Equal Responsibility
- Focus on distribution itself
- Full compensation
10Responsibility Principle ETEC
- Equal Transfers for Equal C-attributes
- Focus on changes in distribution
- Strict Compensation
11A difficulty
- For large populations...
- EIER and ETEC are incompatible except for...
- Additive separability
- Fleurbaey (1995a,b)
- In this special case...
- ...a natural redistribution mechanism
Consider two compromise approaches
12Compromise (1)
- Insist on Full compensation (EIER)
- Weaken ETEC
- Egalitarian-equivalent mechanisms
Reference profile
- Every agent has a post-tax income equal to
- the pre-tax income earned given reference
compensation characteristics plus... - a uniform transfer
13Compromise (2)
- Insist on strict compensation (ETEC)
- Weaken EIER
- Conditionally egalitarian mechanisms
Reference profile
- Every agent k is guaranteed the average income of
a hypothetical economy - In this economy all agents have characteristics
equal to reference profile
14Application
- The responsibility approach gives a reference
income distribution - Exact version depends on balance of compensation
rules - And on income function f.
- Redefine inequality measurement
- not based on perfect equality as a norm
- use the norm income distribution from the
responsibility approach - Devooght (2005) bases this on Cowell (1985)
- Cowell approach based on Theils conditional
entropy - Instead of looking at information content in
going from perfect equality to actual
distribution... - Start from the reference distribution
15Overview...
Deprivation, complaints, inequality
Introduction
An economic interpretation of a sociological
concept
Deprivation
Deprivation
Complaints
16Individual deprivation
- The Yitzhaki (1979) definition
- Equivalent form
- In present notation
- Use the conditional mean
17Deprivation Axiomatic approach 1
- The Better-than set for i
- Focus
- works like the poverty concept
18Deprivation Axiomatic approach 2
- Normalisation
- Additivity
- works like the independence axiom
19Bossert-DAmbrosio (2004)
- This is just the Yitzhaki individual deprivation
index - There is an alternative axiomatisation
- Ebert-Moyes (Economics Letters 2000)
- Different structure of reference group
20Aggregate deprivation
- Simple approach just sum individual deprivation
- Could consider an ethically weighted variant
- Chakravarty and Chakraborty (1984)
- Chakravarty and Mukherjee (1999b)
- As with poverty consider relative as well as
absolute indices
21Aggregate deprivation (2)
- An ethically weighted relative index
- Chakravarty and Mukherjee (1999a)
- One based on the generalised-Gini
- Duclos and Grégoire (2002)
22Overview...
Deprivation, complaints, inequality
Introduction
Reference groups and distributional judgments
Deprivation
Deprivation
Complaints
- Model
- Inequality results
- Rankings and welfare
23The Temkin approach
- Larry Temkin (1986, 1993) approach to inequality
- Unconventional
- Not based on utilitarian welfare economics
- But not a complete outlier
- Common ground with other distributional analysis
- Poverty
- deprivation
- Contains the following elements
- Concept of a complaint
- The idea of a reference group
- A method of aggregation
24What is a complaint?
- Individuals relationship with the income
distribution - The complaint exists independently
- does not depend on how people feel
- does not invoke utility or (dis)satisfaction
- Requires a reference group
- effectively a reference income
- a variety of specifications
- see also Devooght (2003)
25Types of reference point
- BOP
- The Best-Off Person
- Possible ambiguity if there is more than one
- By extension could consider the best-off group
- AVE
- The AVErage income
- Obvious tie-in with conventional inequality
measures - A conceptual difficulty for those above the mean?
- ATBO
- All Those Better Off
- A conditional reference point
26Aggregation
- The complaint is an individual phenomenon.
- How to make the transition from this to society
as a whole? - Temkin makes two suggestions
- Simple sum
- Just add up the complaints
- Weighted sum
- Introduce distributional weights
- Then sum the weighted complaints
27The BOP Complaint
- Let r(x) be the first richest person you find in
N. - Person r (and higher) has income xn.
- For lower persons, natural definition of
complaint - Similar to fundamental difference for poverty
- Now we replace p with r
28BOP-Complaint Axiomatisation
- Use same structural axioms as before. Plus
- Monotonicity income increments reduce complaint
- Independence
- Normalisation
29Overview...
Deprivation, complaints, inequality
Introduction
A new approach to inequality
Deprivation
Deprivation
Complaints
- Model
- Inequality results
- Rankings and welfare
30Implications for inequality
- Broadly two types of axioms with different roles.
- Axioms on structure
- use these to determine the shape of the
measures. - Transfer principles and properties of measures
- use these to characterise ethical nature of
measures
31A BOP-complaint class
- The Cowell-Ebert (SCW 2004) result
- Similarity of form to FGT
- Characterises a family of distributions
32The transfer principle
- Do BOP-complaint measures satisfy the transfer
principle? - If transfer is from richest, yes
- But if transfers are amongst hoi polloi, maybe
not - Cowell-Ebert (SCW 2004)
- Look at some examples that satisfy this
33Inequality contours
- To examine the properties of the derived indices
- take the case n 3
- Draw contours of T?inequality
- Note that both the sensitivity parameter ? and
the weights w are of interest
34Inequality contours (e2)
w10.5 w20.5
35Inequality contours (e2)
w10.75 w20.25
36Inequality contours (e 1)
w10.75 w20.25
37By contrast Gini contours
38Inequality contours (e 0)
w10.5 w20.5
39Inequality contours (e 1)
w10.75 w20.25
40Inequality contours (e 1)
w10.5 w20.5
41Special cases
triangles
- If ? ? ? then inequality just becomes the range,
xnx1 . - If ? ? ? then inequality just becomes the
upper-middle class complaint xnxn-1 . - If ? 1 then inequality becomes a generalised
absolute Gini.
Y-shapes
Hexagons
42Which is more unequal?
43Focus on one type of BOP complaint
44Orthodox approach
B
28
30
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
22
24
26
45Te inequality
46The sequence
- Temkins seminal contributions offer an intuitive
approach to considering changes in inequality. - Take a simple model of a ladder with just two
rungs. - The rungs are fixed, but the numbers on them are
not. - Initially everyone is on the upper rung.
- Then, one by one, people are transferred to the
lower rung. - Start with m 0 on lower rung
- Carry on until m n on lower rung
- What happens to inequality?
- Obviously zero at the two endpoints of the
sequence - But in between?
47The sequence (2)
- For the case of T?inequality we have
- This is increasing in m if ? gt 0
- For other cases there is a degenerate sequence in
the same direction
48Overview...
Deprivation, complaints, inequality
Introduction
A replacement for the Lorenz order?
Deprivation
Deprivation
Complaints
- Model
- Inequality results
- Rankings and welfare
49Rankings
- Move beyond simple inequality measures
- The notion of complaint can also be used to
generate a ranking principle that can be applied
quite generally. - This is rather like the use of Lorenz curves to
specify a Lorenz ordering that characterises
inequality comparisons. - Also similar to poverty rankings with arbitrary
poverty lines.
50Cumulative complaints
- Define cumulative complaints
- Gives the CCC
- cumulative-complaint contour
- Just like TIP / Poverty profile
- Use this to get a ranking principle
51Complaint-ranking
- The class of BOP-complaint indices
- Define complaint ranking
- Like the generalised-Lorenz result
52Social welfare again
- Temkins complaints approach to income
distribution was to be viewed in terms of
better or worse - Not just less or more inequality.
- Can incorporate the complaint-inequality index in
a welfare-economic framework
Total income
Inequality
53Welfare contours (f1)
Bs income
As income
54Welfare contours (flt1)
Bs income
As income
55Welfare contours (fgt1)
Bs income
Meades superegalitarianism
As income
56The ATBO Complaint
- Again, a natural definition of complaint
- Similar to fundamental difference for
deprivation - Use this complaint in the Temkin class
- Get a form similar to Chakravarty deprivation
57Summary complaints
- Complaints provide a useful basis for
inequality analysis. - Intuitive links with poverty and deprivation as
well as conventional inequality. - BOP extension provides an implementable
inequality measure. - CCCs provide an implementable ranking principle
58References (1)
- Bossert, W. and M. Fleurbaey (1996)
Redistribution and compensation, Social Choice
and Welfare, 13, 343-355. - Bossert, W. and C. DAmbrosio (2004) Reference
groups and individual deprivation. Working Paper
2004-10, Département de sciences économiques,
Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, succursale
Centre-Ville, Montréal (Québec) H3C 3J7, Canada. - Chakravarty, S. R. and A. B. Chakraborty (1984)
On indices of relative deprivation, Economics
Letters, 14, 283-287 - Chakravarty, S. R. and D. Mukherjee (1999a)
Measures of deprivation and their meaning in
terms of social satisfaction. Theory and
Decision 47, 89-100 - Chakravarty, S. R. and D. Mukherjee (1999b)
Ranking income distributions by deprivation
orderings, Social Indicators Research 46,
125-135.. - Cowell, F. A. (1985) The measurement of
distributional change an axiomatic approach.
Review of Economic Studies, 52, 135.151. - Cowell, F. A. (2005) Gini, Deprivation and
Complaints, Distributional Analysis Discussion
Paper, 84, STICERD, LSE, Houghton St., London,
WC2A 2AE. - Cowell, F. A. and U. Ebert (2004) Complaints and
inequality, Social Choice and Welfare 23, 71-89.
- Devooght, K. (2003) Measuring inequality by
counting complaints theory and empirics,
Economics and Philosophy, 19, 241 - 263, - Devooght, K. (2005) To each the same and to each
his own. A proposal to measure responsibility-sens
itive income inequality, Working paper,
University of Kortrijk.
59References (2)
- Duclos, J.-Y. and P. Grégoire (2002) Absolute
and relative deprivation and the measurement of
poverty, Review of Income and Wealth 48,
471-492. - Dworkin, R. (1981a) What is equality? Part I
Equality of welfare. Philosophy and Public
Affairs, 10, 185- 246. - Dworkin, R. (1981b) What is equality? Part I
Equality of resources. Philosophy and Public
Affairs, 10, 283-345. - Dutta, B. and D. Ray (1989) A concept of
egalitarianism under participation constraints
Econometrica, 57, 615.635. - Fleurbaey, M. (1995a) Equal opportunity or equal
social outcome? Economics and Philosophy 11,
25-55. - Fleurbaey, M. (1995b) Equality and
responsibility, European Economic Review, 39,
683-689. - Fleurbaey, M. (1995c) Three solutions to the
compensation problem, Journal of Economic
Theory, 65, 505-521.
60References (3)
- Ebert, U. and P. Moyes (2000). An axiomatic
characterization of Yitzhakis index of
individual deprivation. Economics Letters 68,
263-270. - Ebert, U. and P. Moyes (2002) A simple
axiomatization of the Foster-Greer-Thorbecke
poverty orderings, Journal of Public Economic
Theory 4, 455-473. - Foster, J. E., Greer, J. and Thorbecke, E. (1984)
A class of decomposable poverty measures,
Econometrica, 52, 761-776 - Jenkins, S. P. and Lambert, P. J. (1997) Three
Is of poverty curves, with an analysis of UK
poverty trends, Oxford Economic Papers, 49,
317-327. - Shorrocks, A. F. (1983) Ranking Income
Distributions, Economica, 50, 3-17 - Temkin, L. S. (1986) Inequality. Philosophy and
Public Affairs 15, 99-121. - Temkin, L. S. (1993) Inequality. Oxford Oxford
University Press. - Yitzhaki, S. (1979) Relative deprivation and the
Gini coefficient, Quarterly Journal of Economics
93, 321.324.