Title of article
Asymptotic and bootstrap inference for inequality and poverty measures
Author/Authors
Davidson، نويسنده , , Russell and Flachaire، نويسنده , , Emmanuel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوفصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
26
From page
141
To page
166
Abstract
A random sample drawn from a population would appear to offer an ideal opportunity to use the bootstrap in order to perform accurate inference, since the observations of the sample are IID. In this paper, Monte Carlo results suggest that bootstrapping a commonly used index of inequality leads to inference that is not accurate even in very large samples, although inference with poverty indices is satisfactory. We find that the major cause is the extreme sensitivity of many inequality indices to the exact nature of the upper tail of the income distribution. This leads us to study two non-standard bootstraps, the m out of n bootstrap, which is valid in some situations where the standard bootstrap fails, and a bootstrap in which the upper tail is modelled parametrically. Monte Carlo results suggest that accurate inference can be achieved with this last method in moderately large samples.
Keywords
Income distribution , Poverty , Bootstrap inference
Journal title
Journal of Econometrics
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Journal of Econometrics
Record number
1559239
Link To Document