Publications des institutions partenaires

S'abonner aux flux infonet economy   121 - 130 of 130

Statistical Inference for Lorenz Curves with Censored Data

Lorenz curves and associated tools for ranking income distributions are commonly estimated on the assumption that full, unbiased samples are available. However it is common to ¯nd income and wealth distributions that are routinely censored or trimmed. We derive the sampling distribution for a key family of statistics in the case where data have been modified in this fashion.

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1998

Resistant Modelling of Income Distributions and Inequality Measures

We review the use and the interpretation of some robustness concepts and techniques in some economic applications. We focus on estimation techniques in income distribution analysis and we discuss the reliability of inequality measures.

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1997

Modelling Income Distribution in Spain: A Robust Parametric Approach

This paper presents a robust estimation of two income distribution models using Spanish data for the period 1990-91 under three different concepts of income. The effect on the estimates of the Theil index due to the choice of the definition of income and of the estimation method is also analysed.

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1996

Are Grouped Data Robustly Fitted?

In this paper we compute the IF of a general class of estimators for grouped data, namely the class of MPE. We find that this IF can be large although it is bounded. Therefore, we propose a more general class of estimators, the MGP-estimators, which include the class of estimators based on the power divergence statistic and permits to define robust estimators. By analogy with Hampel...

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1995

Choosing between two parametric models robustly

In this paper we propose a robust version of Cox-type test statistics for the choice between two non-nested hypotheses. We first show that the influence of small amounts of contamination in the data on the test decision can be very large. Secondly we build a robust test statistic by using the results on robust parametric tests available in the literature and show that the level of...

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1995

Robustness Properties of Poverty Indices

Drawing on recent work concerning the statistical robustness of inequality statistics we examine the sensitivity of poverty indices to data contamination using the concept of the influence function. We show that poverty and inequality indices have fundamentally different robustness properties, and demonstrate that an important commonly used subclass of poverty measures will be robust...

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1994

Robust Estimation of Personal Income Distribution Models

Statistical problems in modelling personal income distributions include estimation procedures, testing, and model choice. Typically, the parameters of a given model are estimated by classical procedures such as maximum likelihood and leastsquares estimators. Unfortunately, the classical methods are very sensitive to model deviations such as gross errors in the data, grouping effects...

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1993

Robust methods for personal income distribution models

In the present thesis, robust statistical techniques are applied and developed for the economic problem of the analysis of personal income distributions and inequality measures. We follow the approach based on influence functions in order to develop robust estimators for the parametric models describing personal income distributions when the data are censored and when they are...

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1993

Robustness Properties of Inequality Measures: The Influence Function and the Principle of Transfers

Inequality measures are often used fot summarise information about empirical income distributions. However, the resulting picture of the distribution and of changes in the distribution can be severely distorted if the data are contaminated. The nature of this distortion will in general depend upon the underlying properties of the inequality measure. We investigate this issue...

Institution partenaire

Université de Genève

Full Text

English / 01/01/1993

Pages

Le portail de l'information économique suisse

© 2016 Infonet Economy