entropy.md: Generalised Entropy Measure for a Mixture of Income...

Description Usage Arguments Value Author(s) References See Also Examples

Description

This function uses Monte Carlo methods to estimate an entropy measure for a mixture of two continuous income distributions and a point mass for zero-incomes.

Usage

1
2
entropy.md(n, alpha = 1, dist1, dist2, theta, 
p0, p1, p2, dist.para.table, zero.approx)

Arguments

n

sample size used to estimate the entropy measure.

alpha

the parameter for the generalised entropy family of measures, denoted by alpha by Cowell (2000). Note that this parameter notation differs from the notation used in the ineq package.

dist1

character string with the name of the first continuous distribution used. Must be listed in dist.para.table. Must be equivalent to the respective function of that distribution, e.g. norm for the normal distribution.

dist2

character string with the name of the second continuous distribution used. Must be listed in dist.para.table. Must be equivalent to the respective function of that distribution, e.g. norm for the normal distribution.

theta

vector with the parameters of dist1 and dist2. Order must be the same as in the functions for the distributions.

p0

scalar with probability mass for the point mass.

p1

scalar with probability mass for dist1.

p2

scalar with probability mass for dist2.

dist.para.table

a table of the same form as dist.para.t with distribution name, function name and number of parameters.

zero.approx

a scalar which replaces zero-incomes (and negative incomes), such that entropy measures involving a logarithm return finite values.

Value

entropy

the estimated entropy measure.

alpha

the entropy parameter used.

y

a vector with the simulated incomes to estimate the entropy measure.

y2

a vector with the zero-replaced simulated incomes to estimate the entropy measure.

zero.replace

a logical vector indicating whether a zero has been replaced.

stat

a vector with the simulated group the observation was chosen from. 0 is the point mass, 1 dist1 and 2 dist2.

Author(s)

Alexander Sohn

References

Cowell, F.A. (2000): Measurement of Inequality, in: Atkinson and Bourguignon (eds.), Handbook of Income Distribution, pp. 87-166, Elsevier, Amsterdam.

See Also

dist.para.t, entropy

Examples

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
 
theta<-c(2,1,5,2)
x<- c(rgamma(500,2,1),rgamma(500,5,2))
para<-1
entropy(x,para)
data(dist.para.t)
entropy.md(100,para,"gamma","gamma",theta,0,0.5,0.5,dist.para.t,zero.approx=1)$entropy

acid documentation built on May 1, 2019, 10:14 p.m.