Chapter 15: Problem 24
If a country had perfect income equality what would the Lorenz curve look like?
Chapter 15: Problem 24
If a country had perfect income equality what would the Lorenz curve look like?
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Get started for freeA group of 10 people have the following annual incomes: \$24,000, \$18,000, \$50,000, \$100,000, \$12,000, S36,000, S80,000, S10,000, S24,000, S16,000. Calculate the share of total income that each quintile receives from this income distribution. Do the top and bottom quintiles in this distribution have a greater or larger share of total income than the top and bottom quintiles of the U.S. income distribution?
In country \(\mathrm{A}\), the population is 300 million and 50 million people are living below the poverty line. What is the poverty rate?
Identify some public policies that can reduce the level of economic inequality.
Many critics of government programs to help low income individuals argue that these programs create a poverty trap. Explain how programs such as TANF, EITC, SNAP, and Medicaid will affect low-income individuals and whether or not you think these programs will benefit families and children.
Table 15.9 shows the share of income going to each quintile of the income distribution for the United Kingdom in 1979 and \(1991 .\) Use this data to calculate what the points on a Lorenz curve would be, and sketch the Lorenz curve. How did inequality in the United Kingdom shift over this time period? How can you see the patterns in the quintiles in the Lorenz curves? $$\begin{array}{l|l|l} \hline {}{} {\text { Share of Income }} & {}{} {1979} & {}{} {1991} \\ \hline \text { Top quintile } & 39.7 \% & 42.9 \% \\ \hline \text { Fourt quintile } & 24.8 \% & 22.7 \% \\ \hline \text { Middle quintile } & 17.0 \% & 16.3 \% \\ \hline \text { Second quintile } & 11.5 \% & 11.5 \% \\ \hline \text { Bottom quintile } & 7.0 \% & 6.6 \% \\ \hline \end{array}$$
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