Hoover index


The Hoover index, also known as the Robin Hood index or the Schutz index, is a measure of income metrics. It is equal to the portion of the total community income that would have to be redistributed for there to be income uniformity.
It can be graphically represented as the longest vertical distance between the Lorenz curve, or the cumulative portion of the total income held below a certain income percentile, and the 45 degree line representing perfect equality.
The Hoover index is typically used in applications related to socio-economic class and health. It is conceptually one of the simplest inequality indices used in econometrics. A better known inequality measure is the Gini coefficient which is also based on the Lorenz curve.

Computation

Let be the income of the -th person and be the mean income. Then the Hoover index is:
This value can also be computed using quantiles. For the formula, a notation is used, where the amount of quantiles only appears as upper border of summations. Thus, inequities can be computed for quantiles with different widths. For example, could be the income in the quantile #i and could be the amount of earners in the quantile #i. then would be the sum of incomes of all quantiles and would be the sum of the income earners in all quantiles.
Computation of the Robin Hood index :
For comparison, here also the computation of the symmetrized Theil index is given:
Both formulas can be used in spreadsheet computations.