ineq(x, parameter = NULL, type = c("Gini", "RS", "Atkinson", "Theil", "Kolm", "var", "square.var", "entropy"), na.rm = TRUE)
Gini(x, corr = FALSE, na.rm = TRUE)
RS(x, na.rm = TRUE)
Atkinson(x, parameter = 0.5, na.rm = TRUE)
Theil(x, parameter = 0, na.rm = TRUE)
Kolm(x, parameter = 1, na.rm = TRUE)
var.coeff(x, square = FALSE, na.rm = TRUE)
entropy(x, parameter = 0.5, na.rm = TRUE)NULL
  the default parameter of the respective measure is used)Gini specifying whether
  or not a finite sample correction should be applied.var.coeff, for details
  see below.NAs) be removed
  prior to computations? If set to FALSE the computations yield
  NA.ineq is just a wrapper for the inequality measures Gini,
         RS, Atkinson, Theil, Kolm,var.coeff,
         entropy. If parameter is set to NULL the default from
         the respective function is used.         Gini is the Gini coefficient, RS is the the Ricci-Schutz
         coefficient (also called Pietra's measure), Atkinson gives
         Atkinson's measure and Kolm computes Kolm's measure.
         If the parameter in Theil is 0 Theil's entropy measure is
         computed, for every other value Theil's second measure is
         computed.
         ineq(x, type="var") and var.coeff(x) respectively
         compute the coefficient of variation, while
         ineq(x,type="square.var") and var.coeff(x, square=TRUE)
         compute the squared coefficient of variation.
         entropy computes the generalized entropy, which is for
         parameter 1 equal to Theil's entropy coefficient and for parameter
         0 equal to the second measure of Theil.
F A Cowell: Measuring Inequality, 1995 Prentice Hall/Harvester Wheatshef,
Marshall / Olkin: Inequalities: Theory of Majorization and Its Applications, New York 1979 (Academic Press).
conc, pov# generate vector (of incomes)
x <- c(541, 1463, 2445, 3438, 4437, 5401, 6392, 8304, 11904, 22261)
# compute Gini coefficient
ineq(x)
# compute Atkinson coefficient with parameter=0.5
ineq(x, parameter=0.5, type="Atkinson")
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab