Robin Hood index

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The Robin Hood index, also known as Hoover index, is a measure of income inequality. It is equal to the portion of the total community income that would have to be redistributed (taken from the richer half of the population and given to the poorer half) for there to be perfect equality.

It can be graphically represented as the longest vertical distance between the Lorenz curve, or the cumulative portion of the total income held below a certain income percentile, and the 45 degree line representing perfect equality.

Mathematically, the Robin Hood index for Lorenz curve L(x) is max(xL(x)).

The Robin Hood index is typically used in applications related to socio-economic class (SES) and health. It is conceptually the simplest inequality index used in econometrics. A better known inequality measure is the Gini coefficient which is based on the Lorenz curve.

[edit] Literature

  • Edgar Malone HOOVER jr.: The Measurement of Industrial Localization, Review of Economics and Statistics, 1936, Vol. 18, No. 162-171
  • Edgar Malone HOOVER jr.: An Introduction to Regional Economics, 1984, ISBN 0075544407
  • Philip B. COULTER: Measuring Inequality, 1989, ISBN 0-8133-7726-9 (This book describes about 50 different inequality measures.)
  • Robert SAPOLSKY: Sick of Poverty, Scientific American, December 2005

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