Gini Index Explained and Gini Coefficients Around the World

What Is the Gini Index?

The Gini index determines a nation's level of income inequality by measuring the income distribution or wealth distribution across its population. The Gini index was developed in 1912 by Italian statistician Corrado Gini.

The coefficient of the Gini index ranges from 0 (or 0%) to 1 (or 100%), with 0 representing perfect equality and 1 representing perfect inequality.

The nation of South Africa has the world's worst level of income inequality, at a Gini index ranking of 63.0%, according to the World Bank. Norway had the lowest level of income inequality, at 22.7%. The level of income inequality in the U.S. was 39.8%.

Key Takeaways

  • The Gini index is a measure of the distribution of income across a population.
  • A higher Gini index indicates greater inequality, with high-income individuals receiving much larger percentages of the population’s total income.
  • Global inequality, as measured by the Gini index, has steadily increased over the past few centuries and spiked during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Limitations of the Gini index may overstate income inequality and can obscure important information about income distribution.
Gini Index

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Understanding the Gini Index

A country in which every resident has the same income would have an income Gini coefficient of 0. A country in which one resident earned all the income, while everyone else earned nothing, would have an income Gini coefficient of 1.

The same analysis can apply to wealth distribution (the wealth Gini coefficient), but because wealth is more difficult to measure than income, Gini coefficients usually refer to income and are reported simply as the Gini coefficient or Gini index, without specifying that they refer to income. Wealth Gini coefficients tend to be much higher than those for income.

Even in affluent countries, the Gini index measures net income rather than net worth, so a nation’s wealth can be concentrated in the hands of a small number of people even if income distribution is relatively equal.

The Gini coefficient is an important tool for analyzing income or wealth distribution within a country or region, but it should not be mistaken for an absolute measurement of income or wealth.

A high-income country and a low-income country can have the same Gini coefficient, as long as incomes are distributed similarly within each. For example, Turkey and the United States have nearly identical Gini coefficients, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), despite Turkey’s vastly lower gross domestic product (GDP) per person.

Graphical Representation of the Gini Index

The Gini index is often represented graphically through the Lorenz curve, as depicted below, which shows income (or wealth) distribution by plotting the population percentile by income on the horizontal axis and cumulative income on the vertical axis. The Gini coefficient is equal to the area below the line of perfect equality (0.5 by definition) minus the area below the Lorenz curve, divided by the area below the line of perfect equality. In other words, it is double the area between the Lorenz curve and the line of perfect equality.

Lorenz Curve illustration

The Gini Index Around the World

Global Gini

The Gini coefficient showed a sustained growth in inequality worldwide during the 19th and 20th centuries.

In 1820, the global Gini coefficient stood at 0.50, while in 1980 and 1992, the figure was 0.657.

A later estimate by the World Inequality Lab, from 2020, estimates the global Gini coefficient at 0.67.

Graph showing global inequality from 1820 to 2010

Source: The World Bank

COVID-19 had a further negative impact on income equality. According to the World Bank, the Gini coefficient increased by about 1.5 points in the five years following major epidemics, such as Ebola and Zika. Economists believe COVID-19 triggered an increase of 0.5 points in the Gini coefficient from 2019 to 2020, the largest single-year increase in global inequality since World War II.

Gini Within Countries

Below are the income Gini coefficients of every country for which the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) World Factbook provides data:

Some of the world’s poorest countries have some of the world’s highest Gini coefficients, while many of the lowest Gini coefficients are found in wealthier European countries. However, the relationship between income inequality and GDP per capita is not one of perfect negative correlation, and the relationship has varied over time.

Michail Moatsos of Utrecht University and Joery Baten of Tuebingen University show that from 1820 to 1929, inequality rose slightly—then tapered off—as GDP per capita increased. From 1950 to 1970, inequality tended to fall as GDP per capita rose above a certain threshold. From 1980 to 2000, inequality fell with higher GDP per capita, then curved back up sharply.

Three graphs showing the behavior of gross domestic product (GDP) at three different moments in time
Correlation between Gini co-efficients and GDP per capita in three time periods. Source: Michail Moatsos and Joery Baten.

Limitations of the Gini Index

Though useful for analyzing economic inequality, the Gini coefficient has some shortcomings.

The metric’s accuracy is dependent on reliable GDP and income data. Shadow economies and informal economic activity are present in every country.

Informal economic activity tends to represent a larger portion of true economic production in developing countries and at the lower end of the income distribution within countries. In both cases, this means that the Gini index of measured incomes will overstate true income inequality.

Accurate wealth data is even more difficult to come by due to the popularity of tax havens that obscure the amounts of money held by the wealthiest.

Another flaw is that very different income distributions can result in identical Gini coefficients. Because the Gini attempts to distill a two-dimensional area (the gap between the Lorenz curve and the equality line) down to a single number, it obscures information about the shape of inequality.

In everyday terms, this would be similar to describing the contents of a photo solely by its length along one edge, or the simple average brightness value of the pixels.

Though using the Lorenz curve as a supplement can provide more information in this respect, it also does not show demographic variations among subgroups within the distribution, such as the distribution of incomes across age, race, or social groups.

In that vein, understanding demographics can be important for understanding what a given Gini coefficient represents. For example, a large retired population pushes the Gini higher.

What Country Has the Highest Gini Index?

South Africa, with a Gini coefficient of 63.0%, is currently recognized as the country with the highest income inequality.

The World Population Review attributes this massive inequality to racial, gender, and geographic discrimination, with white males and urban workers in South Africa earning much better salaries than everyone else.

What Does a Gini Index of 50 Mean?

The Gini index ranges from 0% to 100%, with 0 representing perfect equality and 100 representing perfect inequality. A national Gini of 50 marks the halfway point and can be viewed as a nation where income is not fairly distributed.

Only 14 countries in the world have a Gini of 50 or more as of 2024.

Is the U.S. Gini Coefficient High or Low?

The United States has a Gini coefficient estimated at 39.8, according to The World Bank. That is a high reading for a developed economy.

Economists blame rising income inequality in the U.S. on factors such as technological change, globalization, the decline of unions, and the eroding value of the minimum wage.

The Bottom Line

If the gap between rich and poor continues to increase, the evaluation of the income gap can become more important. And the Gini index can provide a good starting point when it comes to measuring income inequality.

Knowing the Gini index numbers is no panacea, but it can quantify and track the direction in which a society is moving, which may open the door for dialogue and potential solutions.

But keep in mind that there are limitations associated with using this measure. The coefficient is only as reliable as the data used to calculate it, and a single-number reading cannot tell the whole story.

Article Sources
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  1. Lidia Ceriani and Paolo Verme, via ResearchGate. “The Origins of the Gini Index: Extracts from Variabilità e Mutabilità (1912) by Corrado Gini,” The Journal of Economic Inequality, September 2012, vol. 10, no. 3, Pages 1–23.

  2. U.S. Census Bureau. “Gini Index.”

  3. The World Bank. “Gini Index.”

  4. The World Bank. “GDP Per Capita (Current US$)—Turkiye.”

  5. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. “OECD Income (IDD) and Wealth (WDD) Distribution Databases.”

  6. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. “Inequality Analysis: The Gini Index.” Pages 6–9.

  7. World Inequality Lab. "Global inequality from 1820 to now: the persistence and mutation of extreme inequality."

  8. World Population Review. “Gini Coefficient by Country 2024.”

  9. The World Bank. “Poverty and Shared Prosperity 2022: Correcting Course.” Page 83.

  10. U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, The World Factbook. “Gini Index Coefficient—Distribution of Family Income.”

  11. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. “How Was Life? Global Well-Being Since 1820.” Page 210.

  12. The World Bank. “Gini Index.”

  13. Pew Research Center. “Trends in Income and Wealth Inequality.”

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