ScholarGate
Asystent

Porównaj metody

Przeglądaj wybrane metody obok siebie; wiersze, które się różnią, są wyróżnione.

Poverty Dominance Analysis×Lorenz Curve×
DziedzinaEkonomiaSociology
RodzinaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Rok powstania19871905
TwórcaAnthony Atkinson (1987); James Foster & Anthony Shorrocks (1988)Max Otto Lorenz
TypRobust distributional orderingGraphical representation of distributional inequality
Źródło pierwotneAtkinson, A. B. (1987). On the measurement of poverty. Econometrica, 55(4), 749–764. DOI ↗Lorenz, M. O. (1905). Methods of measuring the concentration of wealth. Publications of the American Statistical Association, 9(70), 209–219. DOI ↗
Inne nazwyStochastic Dominance Analysis, Poverty Orderings, TIP Curve Analysis, First- and Second-Order Poverty DominanceLorenz concentration curve, Lorenz diagram, cumulative share curve
Pokrewne35
PodsumowaniePoverty dominance analysis asks whether one distribution has unambiguously less poverty than another for a whole class of poverty measures and a whole range of poverty lines, rather than for a single index and a single line. Building on Anthony Atkinson's 1987 stochastic-dominance treatment of poverty and the Foster-Shorrocks 1988 poverty-orderings results, it compares cumulative distribution functions (poverty incidence curves) and their successive integrals (poverty deficit and severity curves). When the curve for one distribution lies everywhere below another, that distribution has less poverty for every measure in a corresponding class and every line in the range — a robust conclusion immune to the index-and-line arbitrariness that bedevils single-number comparisons.The Lorenz curve is a graphical device that displays the full shape of inequality in a distribution by plotting the cumulative share of a quantity (such as income) held by the cumulative share of the population, ranked from poorest to richest. Introduced by Max Lorenz in 1905, it underlies the Gini coefficient and provides the basis for ranking distributions by inequality when one curve lies entirely above another.
ScholarGateZbiór danych
  1. v1
  2. 2 Źródła
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Źródła
  3. PUBLISHED

Przejdź do wyszukiwania Pobierz slajdy

ScholarGatePorównaj metody: Poverty Dominance Analysis · Lorenz Curve. Pobrano 2026-06-25 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare