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Pareto index

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In economics the Pareto index, named after the Italian economist and sociologist Vilfredo Pareto, is a measure of the breadth of income or wealth distribution. It is one of the parameters specifying a Pareto distribution and embodies the Pareto principle. As applied to income, the Pareto principle is sometimes stated in popular expositions by saying 20% of the population has 80% of the income. In fact, Pareto's data on British income taxes in his Cours d'économie politique indicates that about 30% of the population had only about 70% of the income.

One of the simplest characterizations of the Pareto distribution, when used to model the distribution of incomes, says that the proportion of the population whose income exceeds any positive number x > xm is

\left(\frac{x_\mathrm{m}}{x}\right)^\alpha

where xm is a positive number, the minimum of the support of this probability distribution (the subscript m stands for minimum). The Pareto index is the parameter α (since a proportion must be between 0 and 1, inclusive, the index α must be positive). The larger the Pareto index, the smaller the proportion of very high-income people. (The 80-20 rule holds precisely when α = log4(5) = 1.16....)

Mathematically, the formula above entails that all incomes are at least the lower bound xm, which is positive. Economists therefore sometimes state that the Pareto law as stated here applies only to the upper tail of the distribution.

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