Theil index

Theil index

The Theil index, [ [http://utip.gov.utexas.edu/papers/utip_14.pdf Introduction to the Theil index from the University of Texas] ] derived by econometrician Henri Theil, is a statistic used to measure economic inequality.

Mathematics

The formula [http://economicsbulletin.vanderbilt.edu/2008/volume15/EB-07O10036A.pdf] is

: T_T=frac{1}{N}sum_{i=1}^N left( frac{x_i}{overline{x cdot ln{frac{x_i}{overline{x} ight)

: T_L=frac{1}{N}sum_{i=1}^N left( ln{frac{overline{x{x_i ight)

where x_i is the income of the ith person, overline{x}= frac{1}{N} sum_{i=1}^N x_i is the mean income, and N is the number of people. The first term inside the sum can be considered the individual's share of aggregate income, and the second term is that person's income relative to the mean. If everyone has the same (i.e., mean) income, then the index is 0. If one person has all the income, then the index is ln "N".

The Theil index is derived from Shannon's measure of information entropy. Letting "T" be the Theil index and "S" be Shannon's information entropy measure,

: T=ln(N)-S. ,

Shannon derived his entropy measure in terms of the probability of an event occurring. This can be interpreted in the Theil index as the probability a dollar drawn at random from the population came from a specific individual. This is the same as the first term, the individual's share of aggregate income.

With reference to information theory [ISO/IEC DIS 2382-16:1996 Information theory] , Theil's measure is a "redundancy" rather than an entropy. The redundancy of a system at a given time is the difference between its maximum entropy and its present entropy at that time.http://www.poorcity.richcity.org (Redundancy, Entropy and Inequality Measures)]

Application of the Theil index

Theil's index takes an equal distribution for reference which is similar to distributions in statistical physics. An index for an actual system is an "actual redundancy", that is, the difference between "maximum entropy" and "actual entropy" of that system.

Theil's measure can be converted into one of the indexes of Anthony Barnes Atkinson. The result of the conversion also is called "normalized Theil index"Juana Domínguez-Domínguez, José Javier Núñez-Velázquez: " [http://opus.zbw-kiel.de/volltexte/2005/2673/pdf/Papier6004.pdf The Evolution of Economic Inequality in the EU Countries During the Nineties] ", 2005] . James E. FosterJames E. Foster and Amartya Sen, 1996, "On Economic Inequality", expanded edition with annexe, ISBN 0-19-828193-5] used such a measure to replace the Gini coefficient in Amartya Sen's "welfare function" W=f(income,inequality). The income e.g. is the average income for individuals in a group of income earners. Thus, Foster's welfare function can be computed directly from the Theil index T, if the conversion is included into the computation of the average per capita welfare function:

: W = overline ext{income} cdot {e^{-T_L.,

Here the "Theil-L" index should be used. The difference to the "Theil-T" index will be described later.

Theil index and Hoover index

s. Thus, inequities can be computed for quantiles with different widths A_i. For example, E_i could be the income in the quantile #i and A_i could be the amount (absolute or relative) of earners in the quantile #i. E_ ext{total} then would be the sum of incomes of all N quantiles and A_ ext{total} would be the sum of the income earners in all N quantiles.

Theil index

Computation of the (asymmetric) Theil index "T" [(1) The first part of the formula is the maximum entropy of the E-A-system. The second part (after the minus symbol) is the real entropy of the E-A-system at a certain time. Such a difference is called redundancy (ISO/IEC DIS 2382-16, information theory).
(2) This version of Theil's formula allows to process quantiles with different widths A_i. N only serves as summation index.
(3) Besides mathematical comparison of this formula to the formulas found in many calculi, you can compare the results [http://www.poorcity.richcity.org/calculator/?quantiles=7,*18000|10,*22000|280,*25000|15,*35000|15,*40000|50,*60000|10,*75000|6,*80000|4,*120000|2,*200000|1,1000000 1A] and [http://www.poorcity.richcity.org/calculator/?quantiles=12,*15000|25,*20000|1000,*30000|35,*35000|100,*45000|80,*50000|10,*60000|25,*80000|8,*175000|4,*250000|1,5000000 1B] yielded by this formula with the examples 1A and 1B given in [http://utip.gov.utexas.edu/tutorials/theo_basic_ineq_measures.doc "The Theoretical Basics of Popular Inequality Measures"] (Travis Hale, University of Texas Inequality Project, 2003).
] :

A first variant of the Theil index refers to E as a base.

: T_T = ln{fracA}_ ext{totalE}_ ext{total} - frac{sum_{i=1}^N E}_i} ln{fracA}_i}E}_i}E}_ ext{total.

With normalized "data", E}'_i}=E_i/E_ ext{total} and A}'_i}=A_i/A_ ext{total} would apply. This would simplify the formula:
: color{Gray} T_T = 0 - frac{sum_{i=1}^N E}'_i} ln{fracA}'_i}E}'_i}{1} = sum_{i=1}^N E}'_i} ln{fracE}'_i}A}'_i

The second variant of the Theil index refers to A as a baseElhanan Helpman: "The Mystery of Economic Growth", 2004, ISBN 0-674-01572-X (See page 150 for a similar computation of T_T and T_L by two formulas.)] .

: T_L = ln{fracE}_ ext{totalA}_ ext{total} - frac{sum_{i=1}^N A}_i} ln{fracE}_i}A}_i}A}_ ext{total.

With normalized "data", A}'_i}=A_i/A_ ext{total} and E}'_i}=E_i/E_ ext{total} would apply. This would simplify the formula:
: color{Gray} T_L = 0 - frac{sum_{i=1}^N A}'_i} ln{fracE}'_i}A}'_i}{1} = sum_{i=1}^N A}'_i} ln{fracA}'_i}E}'_i

Computation of the symmetrized Theil index T_s:

: T_s = frac{1}{2} left( ln{fracA}_ ext{totalE}_ ext{total} - frac{sum_{i=1}^N E}_i} ln{fracA}_i}E}_i}E}_ ext{total + ln{fracE}_ ext{totalA}_ ext{total} - frac{sum_{i=1}^N A}_i} ln{fracE}_i}A}_i}A}_ ext{total ight).

This leads to:

: T_s = {frac{1}{2 sum_{i=1}^N color{Blue} ln{fracE}_i}A}_i left( color{Black} {fracE}_i}E}_ ext{total} - {fracA}_i}A}_ ext{total} color{Blue} ight) color{Black}.

Hoover index

The formula for the Hoover index (also called Robin Hood index) H is:

: H = {frac{1}{2 sum_{i=1}^N color{Blue} left| color{Black} {fracE}_i}E}_ ext{total} - {fracA}_i}A}_ ext{total} color{Blue} ight| color{Black}.

Difference between both indices

The difference between the Hoover index and the symmetrized Theil index only is the operation in the deviation from equity {E}_{i}/{E}_{total} - {A}_{i}/{A}_{total}.

A comparison of the Hoover index and the Theil index "gives sense" to both indices:
* For the Hoover index, the relative deviations in each quantile are summed up. Each deviation is weighted by its own sign (+1 or −1). Thus, the Hoover index is the most simple inequality measure. It has no normative foundations and does not refer to any models from physics or information theory.
* For the symmetrized Theil index, the relative deviations in each quantile are summed up as well. But each deviation is weighted by its relative information weight. Thus, the Theil index is an indicator not only for the plain relative inequality, it also attempts to indicate how much attention inequality can get.

Pareto principle

Understanding the range of the Theil index

The property of not being a measure with a closed scale between 0 and 1 (or 0% and 100%), like in case of the Gini index, is a barrier, which to overcome seems to be difficult even for famous scientists: Theil's index "is not a measure that is exactly overflowing with intuitive sense," wrote Amartya Sen in a book, in which his co-author James Foster used the Theil index nevertheless. One way to overcome this obstacle is the normalized Theil index T_{normalized}=1-e^{-T}.

The alternative is, not to normalize the index and to use it as it is due to an interesting property of that index: For resource distributions described by only two quantiles, the Theil index is 0 for 50:50 distributions and reaches 1 at 82:18Example: 82.4% of the people own 17.6% of all ressources and 17.6% own 82.4% of all ressources. For computation see also http://www.poorcity.richcity.org/calculator/?quantiles=82.4,17.6|17.6,82.4] , which is very close to a distribution often referred to as "
* The Gini index is 0 if the distribution is completely equal. It is 1 at maximum inequality.
* The Theil index
** is 0 for an inequality represented by a 50:50 distribution (the distribution is completely equal),
** is 0.5 for an inequality represented by a 74:26 distribution,
** is 1 for an inequality represented by a 82:18 distribution (which is slightly above the equivalent to the frequently cited 80:20 distribution),
** is 2 for an inequality represented by a 92:8 distribution and
** is 4 for an inequality represented by a 98:2 distribution.

Computing the Theil index from an "A":"B" distribution

A Theil index "T" can be found for any "A":"B" distribution in societies, which are split into two quantiles. The height "A" of the 1st quantile is the height "B" of the 2nd quantile. The width "B" of the 1st quantile is the width "B" of the 2nd quantile. First the Gini index "G" (which in this case is similar to the Hoover index) is calculated from the "A":"B" distribution (the range of the variables is 0 to 1 instead of 0% to 100%):

: G=H=left|2A-1 ight|

Then

: T_T =T_L =T_s = 2G , operatorname{arctanh} left( G ight).

Reverse computation

The reverse computation is a recursion:
* Initiation::: displaystyle G = T
* Repeat the following two operatios until the error left| 2G , operatorname{arctanh} left( G ight) - T ight| is small enough:

:: displaystyle G_0 = G:: displaystyle G = mathrm{tanh} left( frac{T}{G+G_0} ight)

* Change to the format of the "pareto-principle"::: displaystyle A:B = left( frac{1+G}{2} ight): left( frac{1-G}{2} ight)

Decomposability

One of the advantages of the Theil index is that it is a weighted average of inequality within subgroups, plus inequality among those subgroups. For example, inequality within the United States is the average inequality within each state, weighted by state income, plus the inequality among states.

If for the Theil-T index the population is divided into m certain subgroups and s_i is the income share of group i, T_{Ti} is the Theil-T index for that subgroup, and overline{x}_i is the average income in group i, then the Theil index is

: T_T = sum_{i=1}^m s_i T_{T_i} + sum_{i=1}^m s_i ln{frac{overline{x}_i}{overline{x}

The formula for the Theil-L index is:: T_L = frac{1}{m} sum_{i=1}^m T_{L_i} + frac{1}{m} sum_{i=1}^m ln{frac{overline{x}_i}{overline{x}

:Note: This image is not the Theil Index in each area of the United States, but of contributions to the US Theil Index by each area (the Theil Index is always positive, individual contributions to the Theil Index may be negative or positive).

If the aggregated groups have different amount of members, these formulas apply:: T_T = ln{fracA}_mathrm{totalE}_mathrm{total} - frac{sum_{i=1}^N E}_i} left( ln{fracA}_i}E}_i - T_{T_i} ight)}E}_mathrm{total

: T_L = ln{fracE}_mathrm{totalA}_mathrm{total} - frac{sum_{i=1}^N A}_i} left( ln{fracE}_i}A}_i - T_{L_i} ight)}A}_mathrm{total

: T_s = {frac{1}{2 sum_{i=1}^N ln frac{E_i}{A_i} left( fracE}_i}{E_ ext{total - frac{A_i}{A_ ext{total ight) + fracE}_i}{E_ ext{total T_{T_i} + fracA}_i}{A_ ext{total T_{L_i}

The decomposability is a property of the Theil index which the more popular Gini coefficient does not offer. The Gini coefficient is more intuitive to many people since it is based on the Lorenz curve. However, it is not easily decomposable like the Theil.

Welfare function

Amartya Sen proposed to use the Gini Index to compute a welfare function which would yield the per capita income earned by anyone who is randomly selected from a population within which the total income is distributed inequally:

:W_mathrm{Gini} = overline{ ext{Income cdot left( 1-G ight) Later James E. Foster proposed as co author in the second edition of Amartya Sen's "On Economic Inequality" [James E. Foster und Amartya Sen, 1996, "On Economic Inequality", expanded edition with annexe, ISBN 0-19-828193-5] written together with Amartya Sen to use one of the entropy inequality measures from Atkinson. Due to the relation between that measure and the Theil index, Fosters proposel can be implemented by this formula:

:W_mathrm{Theil-L} = overline{ ext{Income cdot mathrm{e}^{-T_L} = frac {E_mathrm{total{A_mathrm{total ext{ } mathrm{e}^{-T_L}

The same welfare function can be computed from the right term of the Theil-L formula:

:W_mathrm{Theil-L} = mathrm{e}^{frac{sum_{i=1}^N A}_i} left( ln{fracE}_i}A}_i - T_{L_i} ight)}A}_mathrm{total} = prod_{i=1}^N left( fracE}_i}A}_i} ext{ } mathrm{e}^{-T_{L_i ight)^{fracA}_i}A}_mathrm{total}

(As the Theil index is decomposavle, in this formula as well as in the following formulas Theil indices also can be specified for the individual groups. But usually that index is not known. In that case its value is zero.)

For the Welfare function, the Theil-L index is used. It yields an per capita income which is close to the lower end of middle class incomes. The inverse value of a welfare function computed with the Theil-T index yields an income, which is close to the upper end of middle class incomes:

:W^{-1}_mathrm{Theil-T} = overline{ ext{Income cdot mathrm{e}^{T_T} = frac {E_mathrm{total{A_mathrm{total ext{ } mathrm{e}^{T_T} = mathrm{e}^{frac{sum_{i=1}^N E}_i} left( ln{fracE}_i}A}_i + T_{T_i} ight)}E}_mathrm{total} = prod_{i=1}^N left( fracE}_i}A}_i} ext{ } mathrm{e}^{T_{T_i ight)^{fracE}_i}E}_mathrm{total}

Example: The average monthly per capita income before taxes in Germany (2001)Online Calculator: [http://www.poorcity.richcity.org/calculator/?quantiles=2445644,1637228|1182780,4428901|1290052,8060236|1234127,10781479|1174868,13205360|1198108,16481239|2550888,44753886|2903479,65460919|2873509,78900365|3343672,112091485|3597341,155447452|3191575,191636729|979934,83527207|363929,40319647|250618,36384882|120812,24842232|62336,18704026|22222,9527507|24196,16310091|9322,13746557|2087,7086559|1063,12164544 Distribution of incomes (before taxation) in Germany, 2001] ] was 2800€. A welfare function with a Theil-L index of 0.578 yields 1570€ per month. Using a Theil-T index of 0.520, the inverse value of the monthly welfare function was 4700€. In comparison, tarif agreements between the labor union and the employers of the electrical and metal industry in Bavaria cover the salary range between 1649€ und 4000€] . This example does not use welfare functions to define the bounds of middle class incomes. It just puts the welfare functions into relation to real world incomes.

displaystyle W_mathrm{Theil-L} is one out of several possible incomes which could be earned by a person, who randomly is selected from a population with a certain distribution of incomes. Similar to the median, this welfare function marks the income, which a randomly selected person is most likely to have. This income will be smaller than the average per capita income.

displaystyle W^{-1}_mathrm{Theil-T} is one out of several possible incomes which could be part of the income to which an Euro belongs, which randomly is selected from the sum of all incomes, which are inequally distributed. This welfare function marks the income, which a randomly selected Euro most likely belongs to. This income will be larger than the average per capita income.

ee also

* Atkinson index
* Gini coefficent
* Robin Hood index
* Suits index
* Income inequality metrics
* Wealth condensation

External links

* Software:
** [http://www.wessa.net/co.wasp Free Online Calculator] computes the Gini Coefficient, plots the Lorenz curve, and computes many other measures of concentration for any dataset
** Free Calculator: [http://www.poorcity.richcity.org/calculator.htm Online] and [http://luaforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=49 downloadable scripts] (Python and Lua) for Atkinson, Gini, and Hoover inequalities
** Users of the [http://www.r-project.org/ R] data analysis software can install the "ineq" package which allows for computation of a variety of inequality indices including Gini, Atkinson, Theil.
** A [http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/loadFile.do?objectId=19968 MATLAB Inequality Package] , including code for computing Gini, Atkinson, Theil indexes and for plotting the Lorenz Curve. Many examples are available.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Theil-Index — Der Theil Index[1] wurde von dem Ökonometriker Henri Theil entwickelt und ist ein statistisches Ungleichverteilungsmaß zur Beschreibung von Einkommens und Vermögensverteilungen. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Mathematik 2 Zerlegbarkeit 3 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Theil — ist der Familienname von Edmund Theil (1913−?), deutscher Schriftsteller Emil Theil (1892−1968), Bremer Politiker (SPD) und Senator Henri Theil (1924−2000), niederländischer Ökonometriker Ria Theil (* 1946), deutsche Politikerin (parteilos) in… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare — Der Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) (zu deutsch etwa Index für nachhaltigen wirtschaftlichen Wohlstand) ist ein wirtschaftlicher Indikator mit dem Ziel, das klassische Bruttoinlandsprodukt (BIP) zu ergänzen oder zu ersetzen. Der ISEW …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Index of business ethics, political economy, and philosophy of business articles — Articles related to business ethics, political economy and philosophy of business include: Accounting reform Bait and switch Black market Collectivism Conservation movement Consumerism Corporate accountability Corporate crime Creative accounting… …   Wikipedia

  • Balassa-Hoover-Index — Die Hoover Ungleichverteilung ist der direkteste und einfachste aller Ungleichverteilungkoeffizienten. Er beschreibt die relative Abweichung vom Mittelwert. Er ist „direkt“, weil er zum Beispiel bei einer Ungleichverteilung von Geld einfach den… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Hoover-Index — Die Hoover Ungleichverteilung ist der direkteste und einfachste aller Ungleichverteilungkoeffizienten. Er beschreibt die relative Abweichung vom Mittelwert. Er ist „direkt“, weil er zum Beispiel bei einer Ungleichverteilung von Geld einfach den… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Gini-Index — Dieser Artikel oder Abschnitt bedarf einer Überarbeitung. Näheres ist auf der Diskussionsseite angegeben. Hilf mit, ihn zu verbessern, und entferne anschließend diese Markierung …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Henri Theil — (* 13. Oktober 1924 in Amsterdam; † 20. August 2000) war ein niederländischer Ökonometriker. Theil erhielt seine akademische Ausbildung an der Universität von Amsterdam. An der Erasmus Universität Rotterdam war er der Nachfolger von Jan Tinbergen …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Diversity index — A diversity index is a statistic which is intended to measure the local members of a set consisting of various types of objects. Diversity indices can be used in many fields of study to assess the diversity of any population in which each member… …   Wikipedia

  • Robin Hood index — The Robin Hood index, also known as the 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 by force from the richer half of the population and given …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”