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The Atkinson index is an inequality measure and is useful in determining which end of the distribution contributed most to the observed inequality.
Atkinson(x, n = rep(1, length(x)), parameter = 0.5, na.rm = FALSE)
a vector containing at least non-negative elements.
a vector of frequencies, must be same length as x.
parameter of the inequality measure (if set to NULL
the default parameter of the respective measure is used).
logical. Should missing values be removed? Defaults to FALSE.
the value of the Akinson Index.
Cowell, F. A. (2000) Measurement of Inequality in Atkinson, A. B. / Bourguignon, F. (Eds): Handbook of Income Distribution. Amsterdam.
Cowell, F. A. (1995) Measuring Inequality Harvester Wheatshef: Prentice Hall.
Marshall, Olkin (1979) Inequalities: Theory of Majorization and Its Applications. New York: Academic Press.
See Herfindahl
, Rosenbluth
for concentration measures and
ineq()
in the package ineq for additional inequality measures
# NOT RUN {
# generate vector (of incomes)
x <- c(541, 1463, 2445, 3438, 4437, 5401, 6392, 8304, 11904, 22261)
# compute Atkinson coefficient with parameter=0.5
Atkinson(x, parameter=0.5)
# }
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