Fondazione GRINS
Growing Resilient,
Inclusive and Sustainable
Galleria Ugo Bassi 1, 40121, Bologna, IT
C.F/P.IVA 91451720378
Finanziato dal Piano Nazionale di Ripresa e Resilienza (PNRR), Missione 4 (Infrastruttura e ricerca), Componente 2 (Dalla Ricerca all’Impresa), Investimento 1.3 (Partnership Estese), Tematica 9 (Sostenibilità economica e finanziaria di sistemi e territori).



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In this paper, we compare two alternative procedures for identifying the within-group component of total inequality while decomposing total inequality into a between and a within-group term: the standard additive decomposition, which defines within-group inequality as the weighted sum of the inequality in each group, and the path-independent decomposition, which redefines the concept of within-group inequality by looking at a standardized distribution where groups have the same average income and do not overlap.
We show that a decomposition of total inequality based on the former approach others a clean measure of the between-group inequality, which is insensitive to changes in the distribution that do not alter the relative difference between the groups’ averages.
On the other hand, a decomposition based on the latter approach others an unbiased measure of the within-group inequality, which is independent of the between-group component. Hence, we propose a new decomposition of the Gini index that combines the definition of between-group inequality stemming from the additive decomposition with the measure of within-group inequality at the base of the path-independent decomposition.
Finally, we turn to the decomposition of the partial Lorenz ordering by exploring the implications of Lorenz between-group dominance combined with Lorenz within-group dominance.
We also show the difficulty of defining sufficient conditions for two Lorenz curves not to intersect and suggest an alternative partial order based on concentration curves which do not account for the overlap between groups.
Corresponding author. Email: domenico.moramarco@uniba.it.
Keywords: inequality, Gini coefficient, decomposition, within-group inequality.
JEL: D63.
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AKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study was funded by the European Union - NextGenerationEU, in the framework of the GRINS - Growing Resilient, INclusive and Sustainable project (GRINS PE00000018). The views and opinions expressed are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union, nor can the European Union be held responsible for them.
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