Gini-stable Lorenz curves and their relation to the generalised Pareto distribution

We introduce an iterative discrete information production process where we can extend ordered normalised vectors by new elements based on a simple affine transformation, while preserving the predefined level of inequality, G, as measured by the Gini index. Then, we derive the family of empirical Lor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of informetrics 2024-05, Vol.18 (2), p.101499, Article 101499
Hauptverfasser: Bertoli-Barsotti, Lucio, Gagolewski, Marek, Siudem, Grzegorz, Żogała-Siudem, Barbara
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We introduce an iterative discrete information production process where we can extend ordered normalised vectors by new elements based on a simple affine transformation, while preserving the predefined level of inequality, G, as measured by the Gini index. Then, we derive the family of empirical Lorenz curves of the corresponding vectors and prove that it is stochastically ordered with respect to both the sample size and G which plays the role of the uncertainty parameter. We prove that asymptotically, we obtain all, and only, Lorenz curves generated by a new, intuitive parametrisation of the finite-mean Pickands' Generalised Pareto Distribution (GPD) that unifies three other families, namely: the Pareto Type II, exponential, and scaled beta distributions. The family is not only totally ordered with respect to the parameter G, but also, thanks to our derivations, has a nice underlying interpretation. Our result may thus shed a new light on the genesis of this family of distributions. Our model fits bibliometric, informetric, socioeconomic, and environmental data reasonably well. It is quite user-friendly for it only depends on the sample size and its Gini index. •A new discrete information production process (IPP) is proposed.•The IPP preserves a predefined level of inequality as measured by the Gini index.•Its corresponding empirical Lorenz curves are stochastically ordered with respect to both the sample size and the Gini index.•Analysis of bibliometric, econometric, environmental, informetric, and other data shows a good fit of our model.•The model asymptotically leads to a new parametrisation of the Pickands generalised Pareto distribution.
ISSN:1751-1577
1875-5879
DOI:10.1016/j.joi.2024.101499