I recently took another look at data, available from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), on income inequality. The Gini coefficient is available on countries in the database, under measures of Social Protection and Well-being. Under that menu, expand the sub menu for Income distribution and poverty, and select inequality. You can see the Gini coefficient (at disposable income, post taxes and transfers) displayed, by country, for various years. Table 1 shows the most recent numbers, sorted from countries with the most equal distribution to the least equal. For one way of thinking about it, the United States is not number 1, since the US is exceeded by Turkey, Mexico, and Chile.
Country | Gini Coefficient (Non Provisional) | Year |
Slovenia | 0.245 | 2011 |
Norway | 0.250 | 2011 |
Iceland | 0.251 | 2011 |
Denmark | 0.253 | 2011 |
Czech Republic | 0.256 | 2011 |
Finland | 0.261 | 2012 |
Slovak Republic | 0.261 | 2011 |
Belgium | 0.264 | 2010 |
Sweden | 0.273 | 2011 |
Luxembourg | 0.276 | 2011 |
Netherlands | 0.278 | 2012 |
Austria | 0.282 | 2011 |
Switzerland | 0.289 | 2011 |
Hungary | 0.290 | 2012 |
Germany | 0.293 | 2011 |
Poland | 0.304 | 2011 |
Korea | 0.307 | 2012 |
France | 0.309 | 2011 |
Ireland | 0.312 | 2009 |
Canada | 0.316 | 2011 |
Italy | 0.321 | 2011 |
Estonia | 0.323 | 2011 |
New Zealand | 0.323 | 2011 |
Australia | 0.324 | 2012 |
Greece | 0.335 | 2011 |
Japan | 0.336 | 2009 |
United Kingdom | 0.341 | 2010 |
Portugal | 0.341 | 2011 |
Spain | 0.344 | 2011 |
Israel | 0.377 | 2011 |
United States | 0.389 | 2012 |
Turkey | 0.412 | 2011 |
Mexico | 0.482 | 2012 |
Chile | 0.503 | 2011 |
The Gini coefficient is a measure of inequality, with a higher Gini coefficient denoting a more unequal distribution of income. It is defined as follows: sort the population in order of increasing income. Plot the percentage of income received by those poorer than each value of income against the percentage of the population with less than that value of income. This is the Lorenz curve, and it will fall below a line with a slope of 45 degrees going through the origin. The Gini coefficient is the ratio of the area between the 45 degree line and the Lorenz curve to the area under the 45 degree line. A Gini coefficient of zero indicates perfect equality, while a Gini coefficient of unity arises when one person receives all income and everybody else gets nothing. Consequently, the Gini coefficient lies between zero and one.
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