ScholarGate
アシスタント

手法を比較

選択した手法を並べて確認できます。異なる行はハイライト表示されます。

Theil Inequality Decomposition×Atkinson Index×
分野経済学Sociology
系統Process / pipelineProcess / pipeline
提唱年19671970
提唱者Henri Theil (1967); decomposition class by Anthony Shorrocks (1980)Anthony Barnes Atkinson
種類Decomposable inequality measureWelfare-based, parameterized inequality index
原典Theil, H. (1967). Economics and Information Theory. Amsterdam: North-Holland. ISBN: 9780444814630Atkinson, A. B. (1970). On the measurement of inequality. Journal of Economic Theory, 2(3), 244–263. DOI ↗
別名Theil Index, Theil's T and L, Generalized Entropy Decomposition, Within-Between Inequality DecompositionAtkinson inequality measure, Atkinson's A, welfare-based inequality index
関連35
概要The Theil index, introduced by Henri Theil in 1967 by importing Shannon's information theory into economics, measures income inequality as the divergence between each unit's income share and its population share. Its defining advantage is exact additive decomposability: total inequality splits cleanly into a within-group component (inequality inside each subgroup) and a between-group component (inequality between subgroup means). Theil's T and its companion L (mean log deviation) are the two best-known members of the generalized-entropy class, which Anthony Shorrocks showed in 1980 to be the only inequality measures that are additively decomposable in this way.The Atkinson index is a welfare-based measure of inequality that incorporates an explicit, analyst-chosen parameter for how much society dislikes inequality. Introduced by Anthony Atkinson in 1970, it asks what fraction of total income could be discarded, under an equal distribution, while leaving social welfare unchanged — making the ethical judgement behind any inequality comparison transparent rather than hidden.
ScholarGateデータセット
  1. v1
  2. 2 出典
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 出典
  3. PUBLISHED

検索へ スライドをダウンロード

ScholarGate手法を比較: Theil Inequality Decomposition · Atkinson Index. 2026-06-24に以下より取得 https://scholargate.app/ja/compare