Abstract:GDP per capita is by far the most popular measure of international levels of development. It is fairly well understood and widely available across countries and time. But it is also recognized that GDP per capita is an imperfect proxy for important factors such as health, education and well-being. An alternative approach has been to work directly with the variables of concern, as in the UNDP Human Development Index (HDI). The HDI combines GDP per capita with life expectancy and schooling into a single composite index. But, the HDI is difficult to compile. Moreover, because it is an index, it cannot tell us about the absolute standard of living of the underlying population: it can only provide rankings of nations at any moment in time and changes in these rankings over time. It turns out that the rankings produced by the GDP per capita and the HDI are quite highly correlated. Given that GDP per capita also provides an absolute measure of income; it is understandable that it remains so popular. Both the GDP per capita and the HDI measures suffer from that fact that “they are averages that conceal wide disparities in the overall population” (Kelley, 1991). As a result, it becomes necessary to either supplement these measures with information on distributional inequality as in the Gini coefficient, or to directly adjust GDP per capita and other variables for distributional variations. Sen (1976) derives (1-Gini) as the appropriate adjustment factor for real income. Since a higher inequality implies a lower (1-Gini), this penalizes regions or countries with higher inequalities. The 1993 HDI used this procedure to adjust GDP per capita in various countries. Subsequently, it was extended to encompass the variables in the HDI using discount factors based on the degrees of inequality in their specific distributions. Later, the index incorporated gender-based adjustments by discounting a country’s overall HDI according to the degree of gender-inequality (Hicks, 2004). The above measures of welfare will be re-examined in light of our own finding that inequality-discounted GDP per capita can be interpreted as a measure of the relative per capita income of the first eighty per cent of a nation’s population. This Policy Research Brief introduces a new measure of worldwide income and inequality, which we call the Vast Majority Income (VMI).

Keywords:Vast Majority Income, VMI, Global Inequality
Publication Date:
Type/Issue:Policy Research Brief/7
ISSN:2358-1379

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