<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE article  PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD Journal Publishing DTD v3.0 20080202//EN" "http://dtd.nlm.nih.gov/publishing/3.0/journalpublishing3.dtd"><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" dtd-version="3.0" xml:lang="en" article-type="research article"><front><journal-meta><journal-id journal-id-type="publisher-id">TEL</journal-id><journal-title-group><journal-title>Theoretical Economics Letters</journal-title></journal-title-group><issn pub-type="epub">2162-2078</issn><publisher><publisher-name>Scientific Research Publishing</publisher-name></publisher></journal-meta><article-meta><article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.4236/tel.2012.25091</article-id><article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">TEL-25813</article-id><article-categories><subj-group subj-group-type="heading"><subject>Articles</subject></subj-group><subj-group subj-group-type="Discipline-v2"><subject>Business&amp;Economics</subject></subj-group></article-categories><title-group><article-title>
 
 
  Properties of Lorenz Curves for Transformed Income Distributions
 
</article-title></title-group><contrib-group><contrib contrib-type="author" xlink:type="simple"><name name-style="western"><surname>ohan</surname><given-names>Fellman</given-names></name><xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff1"><sub>1</sub></xref><xref ref-type="corresp" rid="cor1"><sup>*</sup></xref></contrib></contrib-group><aff id="aff1"><label>1</label><addr-line>Swedish School of Economics, Helsinki, Finland</addr-line></aff><author-notes><corresp id="cor1">* E-mail:<email>fellman@hanken.fi</email></corresp></author-notes><pub-date pub-type="epub"><day>19</day><month>12</month><year>2012</year></pub-date><volume>02</volume><issue>05</issue><fpage>487</fpage><lpage>493</lpage><history><date date-type="received"><day>September</day>	<month>24,</month>	<year>2012</year></date><date date-type="rev-recd"><day>October</day>	<month>25,</month>	<year>2012</year>	</date><date date-type="accepted"><day>November</day>	<month>27,</month>	<year>2012</year></date></history><permissions><copyright-statement>&#169; Copyright  2014 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc. </copyright-statement><copyright-year>2014</copyright-year><license><license-p>This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</license-p></license></permissions><abstract><p>
 
 
  Redistributions of income can be considered as variable transformations of the initial income variable. The transformation is usually assumed to be positive, monotone-increasing and continuous, but discontinuous transformations have also been discussed recently. If the transformation is a tax or a transfer policy, the transformed variable is either the post-tax or the post-transfer income. A central problem has been the Lorenz dominance between the initial and the transformed income. This study considers analyses of other properties of the transformed Lorenz curves, especially its limits. We take in account mainly two cases (a) the transformed variable Lorenz dominates the initial one and (b) the initial Lorenz dominates the transformed one. For applications, the first case is more important than the second. The limits obtained are not accurate for a specific transformation, but do hold generally for all distributions and a broad class of transformations so that, if one pursues general conditions the inequalities obtained cannot be improved.
 
</p></abstract><kwd-group><kwd>Pareto Distribution; Tax Policy; Transfer Policy</kwd></kwd-group></article-meta></front><body><sec id="s1"><title>1. Introduction</title><p>Redistributions of income according to tax or transfer policies can be considered as variable transformations of the initial income. The transformation is usually assumed to be positive, monotone-increasing and continuous. The initial results are given in Theorem 1. [1-3] Consider a nonnegative random variable X with the distribution function<img src="15-1500255\138ff5cf-545e-4354-ba5b-4119f0d99e68.jpg" />, mean <img src="15-1500255\bef69ba5-57c9-429b-a112-074f6b4608fa.jpg" /> and Lorenz curve<img src="15-1500255\c7837742-48c2-421a-a4a0-5ba9323454e9.jpg" />. Let <img src="15-1500255\675cfbd5-eb30-4e5f-98d5-29c65b43c7b1.jpg" /> be a continuous monotone increasing function and assume that <img src="15-1500255\38bb2eaf-395a-44a7-aea5-f08192834ed8.jpg" /> exists. Then Lorenz curve <img src="15-1500255\400dbaae-13be-48aa-b75d-9d79c335b30f.jpg" /> for <img src="15-1500255\28add2c9-0fad-43a5-bb36-a2592ef4650e.jpg" /> exists and 1) <img src="15-1500255\d64f8743-e647-4077-a5da-0e4a014c5e36.jpg" />if <img src="15-1500255\67f43bb9-0a62-41b6-b32b-df9c5fc59b11.jpg" />is monotone decreasing2) <img src="15-1500255\f78ca203-4d18-45ce-9d95-71f17c4fe182.jpg" />if <img src="15-1500255\8f5ca82a-28fb-41c5-adb1-8eaa9c44d057.jpg" /> is constant and 3) <img src="15-1500255\02b7fd91-acda-494b-a36a-21a8e6bc0407.jpg" />if <img src="15-1500255\a302380e-485c-460f-8290-41536000cde4.jpg" />is monotone increasing.</p><p>The importance of case (1) is that it gives the inequality effect of progressive taxation. The case (2) corresponds to flat taxes. The last case (3) is of minor economic importance, but it is included in order to complete the theorem. Recently, Fellman [4,5] has also discussed discontinuous transformations. If the transformation is considered as a tax or a transfer policy, the transformed variable is either the post-tax or the post-transfer income. Under the assumption that Theorem 1 should hold for all income distributions, the conditions are both necessary and sufficient [2,4]. Hemming and Keen [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.25813-ref6">6</xref>] have given an alternative version of the conditions. In this study we consider other general properties of the transformed Lorenz curves.</p></sec><sec id="s2"><title>2. Background</title><p>Consider income X, defined on the interval<img src="15-1500255\93855422-a232-4437-abf7-4fc6b1e962e8.jpg" />, where<img src="15-1500255\6596f8dc-4f2f-4c99-bfdb-09174c32de0c.jpg" />, with the distribution function<img src="15-1500255\ae348259-f484-4826-84d1-1d31dd5b01ed.jpg" />, density function<img src="15-1500255\ec89782e-29d7-4174-8930-4ec180bfa4f9.jpg" />, mean<img src="15-1500255\75b23c00-83d4-4160-b43c-cfe4bcd3ac73.jpg" />, percentile <img src="15-1500255\2185283c-896b-44e9-9734-7a4371f05176.jpg" /> defined as <img src="15-1500255\fd84a89a-cf7c-48f0-bec7-7b65e8d43975.jpg" /> and Lorenz curve<img src="15-1500255\082dbc42-60bd-4d2c-9d1e-c30928774f10.jpg" />. The general formulae are</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37698"><label>(1)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\34f73f9b-3a44-4ec5-b7d5-676c7dae18fc.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37699"><label>(2)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\360416cb-7f8b-44c7-b390-76af84c0cd41.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>where<img src="15-1500255\870fbddc-9327-46aa-af69-165f334d0ff3.jpg" />.</p><p>We consider the transformation<img src="15-1500255\6a6c4efb-459a-4825-b7e8-370152b96822.jpg" />, where <img src="15-1500255\d928bab7-ac4e-4f25-9dcb-6ace1047c721.jpg" /> is non-negative, continuous and monotone-increasing. Since the transformation can be considered as a tax <img src="15-1500255\73fb8cf1-d1e8-4cf2-92a9-5e7329c9e6bd.jpg" /> or a transfer policy<img src="15-1500255\d60aaf29-2eef-4e02-8626-79bd02f7d0b5.jpg" />, the transformed variable is either the post-tax or the posttransfer income.</p><p>The mean and the Lorenz curve for variable Y are</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37700"><label>(3)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\d1726212-07c1-4f20-b6c7-6673d3f4f432.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37701"><label>(4)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\ac9d2743-a8d0-4c2d-8be5-04939b3a917b.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>A fundamental theorem concerning Lorenz dominance is [2,4].</p><p>Theorem 2. Let <img src="15-1500255\d753d8f7-dcdf-41c6-ab8b-b6f8870e4be4.jpg" /> be an arbitrary, non-negative, random variable with the distribution<img src="15-1500255\b42922c4-ba5e-4808-be44-697486cf6b26.jpg" />, mean <img src="15-1500255\cb2fbd5e-0d3d-4536-aa0a-8b6d0c3330a5.jpg" /> and Lorenz curve<img src="15-1500255\5e960c64-74cf-42bf-8e1e-1f1abeca9761.jpg" />. Let <img src="15-1500255\16f33cbd-5c32-441c-b60c-79ededf9ebde.jpg" /> be a nonnegative, monotone-increasing function, let <img src="15-1500255\58808951-0324-4186-bb85-d163fbc0dcd3.jpg" /> and let <img src="15-1500255\ae6d88e4-7bb5-4771-9026-4a45e4c9edc0.jpg" /> exist. The Lorenz curve <img src="15-1500255\601264df-d705-4c14-83e3-4da13c9cb1cf.jpg" /> of Y exists and the following results hold:</p><p>1) <img src="15-1500255\dd174e90-5316-403a-80f1-a0fba90b7bdf.jpg" />if and only if <img src="15-1500255\10ac1f1d-8d49-4083-9d0b-9c9997b5fef9.jpg" /> is monotone-decreasing</p><p>2) <img src="15-1500255\811617d7-b9a4-49cc-8875-d3142939d8ec.jpg" />if and only if <img src="15-1500255\07af071f-2455-4f98-8772-5a451c1a2fd0.jpg" /> is constant and</p><p>3) <img src="15-1500255\d336d80e-e905-4baa-af3f-373f6f24da70.jpg" />if and only if <img src="15-1500255\592ad6ff-cd67-488d-a652-b32155151a31.jpg" /> is monotone-increasing.</p><p>In the following, we consider additional properties of the Lorenz curve<img src="15-1500255\96cf8cf4-b690-43df-adcf-a7c406bb196b.jpg" />. If</p><p><img src="15-1500255\33c14122-2ffc-418b-8f27-32cb3ea40845.jpg" /></p><p>is constant, then according to Theorem 1 (2), <img src="15-1500255\e4a40c78-651b-41eb-b317-21ddc607e7b8.jpg" /> and the transformed Lorenz curve is identical with the initial one, a case which will be ignored.</p></sec><sec id="s3"><title>3. Results</title><sec id="s3_1"><title>3.1. The Ratio <img src="15-1500255\828ae808-3c2c-4120-816f-44924257208d.jpg" /> Is Monotonically Decreasing</title><p>According to Theorem 1 <img src="15-1500255\528f99cc-6edc-4ba3-b7be-769527f4bd10.jpg" /> Lorenz dominates<img src="15-1500255\cde976d6-4a96-4609-87e6-7be1b27498a9.jpg" />. We introduce the values M and m such that</p><p><img src="15-1500255\fdf81a38-54f1-4f73-a40c-3f80f243436f.jpg" /></p><p>and</p><p><img src="15-1500255\305073b1-941d-4106-98e0-dc58fc529fa9.jpg" />.</p><p>Consequently,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\d0a7f6e9-dbf2-4bc8-be63-1ecca0e656f5.jpg" />.</p><p>Let<img src="15-1500255\f8d5df83-7dfb-4d13-9288-08e5fc447598.jpg" />,<img src="15-1500255\b474d034-f386-4db9-91d9-12c50af61a76.jpg" />. Assume that <img src="15-1500255\ab9de4ac-746b-4c58-a081-bd72503aa8b9.jpg" /> and that <img src="15-1500255\98c9eced-d963-4592-83f6-72eb699a9e67.jpg" /> and consequently,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\ff261cf0-a53d-497f-a6d6-37b65de703db.jpg" />.</p><p>Note that points <img src="15-1500255\a418dc34-f45e-4829-94da-6abd18542c97.jpg" /> and <img src="15-1500255\85137688-96a0-45d5-bb68-c0c82a8a030a.jpg" /> are chosen arbitrarily and that the equality signs cannot be ignored because we also include the functions</p><p><img src="15-1500255\aa49999c-0fd4-463f-af66-42f6fe3b2f6a.jpg" />which are not uniformly strict decreasing in the class of transformations. Hence, we have to include members for which equalities hold for almost the whole range and, in addition, sub-intervals in which strict inequalities hold can be chosen arbitrarily short and located arbitrarily within the range<img src="15-1500255\d0eae315-8c59-4353-8676-26981aa8514b.jpg" />. If one pursues general conditions, the inequalities (8) and (9) obtained below cannot be improved. If we assume that</p><p><img src="15-1500255\8f8a45b4-17a2-44ea-9971-209b0eb468ea.jpg" /></p><p>is monotonically decreasing, then <img src="15-1500255\b98e4a24-6530-4607-a58b-6864406e1b22.jpg" /> must be continuous, otherwise</p><p><img src="15-1500255\8e979a64-edbb-4250-b765-4f2e387d6164.jpg" /></p><p>should have positive jumps [<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.25813-ref1">1</xref>].</p><p>From</p><p><img src="15-1500255\e71d97ef-76a4-4643-b58e-78c4129238a9.jpg" /></p><p>it follows that<img src="15-1500255\8bbd44b1-f7e7-40fd-ad2e-b5b013c8494c.jpg" />. The integration over the interval <img src="15-1500255\3cf8d937-2c70-4e5a-87c9-5612f88f0313.jpg" /> yields</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37702"><label>(5)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\102a0546-8af4-4744-97f4-9aee4d7961fb.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and</p><p><img src="15-1500255\34e49b34-1896-43fa-a034-e06b70633785.jpg" />.</p><p>Analogously, it follows from</p><p><img src="15-1500255\205ac7a5-fd69-4e6d-aaec-003a426b9444.jpg" /></p><p>that<img src="15-1500255\225cf3d4-5ebc-457d-80fd-6f0e8a804802.jpg" />, and we obtain</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37703"><label>. (6)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\7dc37017-eeb9-42d0-bd86-84358f03db01.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Consequently,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37704"><label>. (7)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\96226f82-0ab8-4dac-ad86-ec5b8af750fb.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>When <img src="15-1500255\8944ab46-cc64-4b52-b286-c7083cad8a8e.jpg" /> in (7), then</p><p><img src="15-1500255\4f2510bb-6b21-4b25-af58-93a839488a14.jpg" /></p><p>and one obtains</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37705"><label>. (8)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\519909c5-8931-452d-99cc-638ebe99f8c5.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>The lower bound gives an evaluation of how much the Lorenz curve has increased. The upper bound is of minor interest and is commented on later.</p><p>When <img src="15-1500255\63e4c2a3-5939-4156-9451-d6c048f8a40c.jpg" /> in (7), then</p><p><img src="15-1500255\24bde37c-b417-4744-9c0a-7665f648f989.jpg" /></p><p>and one obtains</p><p><img src="15-1500255\a98e5d33-1ba2-46d6-ad20-e5b17a9ea397.jpg" />.</p><p>In order to compare these inequalities with the inequalities in (8), we change the argument from p to q, and the inequalities are</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37706"><label>(9)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\63d29c9e-a17a-4c04-abe5-120cc816ddf4.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>The lower bound gives an evaluation of how much the Lorenz curve has increased. The upper bound is of minor interest and is discussed later.</p><p>Inequality (8) is applicable to small values and inequality (9) to large values of q. For small values of q, we consider the difference</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37707"><label>(10)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\4997c0ce-cfeb-4389-8779-5b839fa6199d.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and for large q we consider the difference</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37708"><label>. (11)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\e87e6fec-f18e-4134-ba97-cb4dde9ea1f3.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>In general,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\5a7703e4-9af5-41bd-bde9-35936cb48894.jpg" /></p><p>and</p><p><img src="15-1500255\d2284fa0-ae32-4a13-a85e-b9bf6ccd2af5.jpg" />.</p><p>The ratio</p><p><img src="15-1500255\d5bb0392-b8eb-4092-af06-88846dde3190.jpg" /></p><p>is decreasing and consequently</p><p><img src="15-1500255\f5216089-732e-4b7a-92ac-5d93a05e1e78.jpg" />.</p><p>Now we differentiate <img src="15-1500255\25490926-e45b-4553-850e-5b63cffbe1fc.jpg" />and obtain</p><p><img src="15-1500255\267f9cb8-2af5-4b5b-b359-e3bc563224bc.jpg" /></p><p>Consequently <img src="15-1500255\5e29ed20-4b50-45f2-b736-02f629f77bda.jpg" /> is increasing from zero at <img src="15-1500255\7c7da364-74f2-4200-9848-7875ee55c62f.jpg" /> to a maximum <img src="15-1500255\311e2f9d-7cf1-45b1-90f9-054189f05bb1.jpg" /> for <img src="15-1500255\6676b72d-95a9-4a40-8c0c-50fe5c024d37.jpg" /> (say).</p><p>Now we differentiate <img src="15-1500255\4116c417-3ea1-4c1c-aef9-6fbfc48378ca.jpg" /> and obtain</p><p><img src="15-1500255\717c7eba-4ace-4400-9a47-7398ad1bbc6b.jpg" /></p><p>Consequently <img src="15-1500255\f3a06e31-c0c6-4a06-bc80-3ba446a01c7f.jpg" /> is decreasing from <img src="15-1500255\57b62900-19dc-4d25-af83-a9c28e319915.jpg" /> to zero when<img src="15-1500255\ccebac46-6e2b-4a49-bdd2-0b313ee8b052.jpg" />. The point<img src="15-1500255\5fd94bf8-1162-405b-8835-f290728a36b4.jpg" />, at which the shift from (10) to (11) is performed, is chosen so that<img src="15-1500255\4dc8bb92-022a-4e87-973d-a7f99590abd9.jpg" />. Now,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\d6b592c7-0da7-4aef-aa49-6ea62766cf9f.jpg" />;</p><p>that is,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\c0facd6f-32cc-459d-8f11-dafb767c5dd9.jpg" />.</p><p>Consequently,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\b4f5e2ae-de48-401b-9753-b125c576710c.jpg" /></p><p>Since the ratio</p><p><img src="15-1500255\0d4ed650-b4c6-42a6-96c6-c358d15facec.jpg" /></p><p>is decreasing, the difference</p><p><img src="15-1500255\18d2b349-bebd-4d82-bb5e-9973620549c3.jpg" /></p><p>shifts its sign from plus to minus at point<img src="15-1500255\ebfd801d-e385-46b7-9e46-8f26ef5df3a2.jpg" />. Hemming and Keen ([<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="scirp.25813-ref6">6</xref>]) gave the condition for Lorenz dominance that</p><p><img src="15-1500255\c2e7a990-c551-4bf0-8d21-b5114e6f8356.jpg" /></p><p>crosses the</p><p><img src="15-1500255\85002bff-138a-4408-9cdd-983ae2cf0614.jpg" /></p><p>level once from above. Our results above have shown that the crossing point is<img src="15-1500255\2a617ff6-542d-4b18-8f64-eebf43247415.jpg" />. The condition obtained can also be otherwise explained. If we write it as</p><p><img src="15-1500255\7284bcb7-d7f1-421e-a647-45577656f5ac.jpg" />we obtain the formula</p><p><img src="15-1500255\ae20c8a5-8e34-4475-996f-f1a8eb509943.jpg" />that is, the Lorenz curves <img src="15-1500255\0bb99a11-f5fd-44d3-9ef6-65bb3bad62bd.jpg" /> and <img src="15-1500255\8f4678cf-1814-4c13-bee2-d4ece493d61b.jpg" /> have parallel tangents and the distance <img src="15-1500255\cb3e32aa-46c5-4a38-b08b-01cc6e0214a8.jpg" /> between the Lorenz curves is maximal for<img src="15-1500255\c9ac7b8b-f2d8-4ac5-93dd-e83e22e47dc2.jpg" />.</p><p>We define the difference function as</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37709"><label>, (12)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\ad97718a-8cfd-4cb8-b304-8cf8ad2e8540.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and the lower bound of <img src="15-1500255\e5a6cb8b-5fbf-4450-9d17-45a70df7629c.jpg" /> is</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37710"><label>. (13)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\b2261dc9-693d-4302-bea9-480061a9d23c.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p><xref ref-type="fig" rid="fig1">Figure 1</xref> shows the Lorenz curves<img src="15-1500255\075862a4-b868-4427-a8ea-81045538a5b7.jpg" />, <img src="15-1500255\62e1a23d-2efa-4d5a-a662-57d37de9039f.jpg" />, the lower bound <img src="15-1500255\69d64571-64de-4b24-b9ca-7169feb493d1.jpg" />and the difference <img src="15-1500255\c007a5dd-7f50-488b-9c6a-7af25b112103.jpg" /> between <img src="15-1500255\154a3e83-32ec-4644-a8cc-565c5514693a.jpg" /> and the lower bound<img src="15-1500255\5976730c-334c-4964-828d-802a8b650caa.jpg" />.</p><p>Remarks. The variable Y Lorenz dominates X, and the upper bounds in (8) and (9) tells us nothing about the reductions in the inequality. The upper bound contains the maximum value <img src="15-1500255\109f299e-c3e8-441f-b32c-47d237c85244.jpg" /> and one has to take it for granted that it is also inaccurate when M is finite. In addition, there may be situations in which<img src="15-1500255\597985a1-fffb-4bef-8fa2-d41ad6c7ff75.jpg" />. The minimum value m can be zero, and in this case the upper bound is one and the obvious inequality <img src="15-1500255\20c72bd3-5846-4897-84f0-19ac2503b9af.jpg" /> is obtained.</p></sec><sec id="s3_2"><title>3.2. The Ratio <img src="15-1500255\5e495da1-0c5e-458f-8c90-a21e800be8a7.jpg" /> Is Monotonically Increasing</title><p>The analysis of this case follows similar traces to the earlier study and the results are analogous to our earlier results, but in this case <img src="15-1500255\c640d88f-3709-4172-8a88-5d9aadae0f90.jpg" /> may be discontinuous. Only the inequality signs have changed their directions. We introduce the values<img src="15-1500255\ee692342-5567-4635-a2dc-4bcdeb8248bb.jpg" /> and <img src="15-1500255\06c4dc72-008c-44f6-88f4-d31965d09430.jpg" /> such that</p><p><img src="15-1500255\795d2b44-331b-4863-a3c0-c48968a7ef90.jpg" />and <img src="15-1500255\70de4aed-31fb-4b8e-a339-e64161bf678e.jpg" /></p><p>and consequently</p><p><img src="15-1500255\4bd4c6c5-d32c-40c6-b004-0197fd171652.jpg" />.</p><p>Note, that in this case the points <img src="15-1500255\6a08b64f-91ed-434e-97c5-3307ddb98f4b.jpg" /> and <img src="15-1500255\b408a118-868e-40a5-bef1-32c911513dff.jpg" /> are also chosen arbitrarily and that the equality signs cannot be ignored because we also include functions</p><p><img src="15-1500255\d0638013-8ceb-42a9-b80e-4bc85a69c682.jpg" /></p><p>which are not uniformly strictly increasing in the class of transformations. Hence, we have to include members for which equalities hold for almost the whole range and, in addition, the subintervals where strict inequalities hold can be arbitrarily short and can be located arbitrarily within the range. If one pursues general conditions, the inequalities (17) and (18) obtained below cannot be improved.</p><p>If <img src="15-1500255\58c8be2a-62eb-4c3c-be5a-037560fbde77.jpg" /> is discontinuous, the discontinuities can only</p><p>be a countable number of finite positive jumps. Under such circumstances <img src="15-1500255\4540dd75-5c88-4991-81cc-0d48047ae533.jpg" /> is still integrable.</p><p>We use the same notations as above and assume that<img src="15-1500255\ab9d5130-30f9-4552-9950-cf5940779d63.jpg" />, that <img src="15-1500255\1709a1f7-87b8-497b-9cb6-959d7f32799d.jpg" /> and consequently that<img src="15-1500255\c1ceff49-88b4-4f39-9b70-73e0cbc9bb5b.jpg" />.</p><p>Now,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\51a57208-4a7e-49d4-81f0-dd197b789243.jpg" />.</p><p>Consider<img src="15-1500255\64c79bdb-7607-4e1a-ba40-868528a3ce59.jpg" />. The integration over the interval <img src="15-1500255\60b924a3-c718-4a44-afc3-298afa476926.jpg" /> yields</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37711"><label>(14)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\4ae8b428-fee5-4521-87a1-71c4f83c2d19.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and</p><p><img src="15-1500255\ce4e6f5e-63c4-4477-8f92-7324793869cd.jpg" />.</p><p>Analogously, if we consider <img src="15-1500255\a11cf911-c8b9-40db-8367-484c6a3c5d94.jpg" /> we obtain</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37712"><label>(15)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\b81b7cee-0b5e-4f02-a23b-818c9cb40cf3.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and</p><p><img src="15-1500255\dc7b0de1-1177-4bae-9ccc-40fba17d49d9.jpg" />.</p><p>Hence,</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37713"><label>. (16)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\a0b08ea5-099b-4dbc-aa40-9546bc7a8d92.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>When <img src="15-1500255\878873bb-fbc2-4fef-902c-c126a573614f.jpg" /> in (16), then</p><p><img src="15-1500255\176d29fb-72a1-4846-bcd1-7a573fe04596.jpg" /></p><p>and one obtains</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37714"><label>. (17)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\58d4f498-d45c-459d-b1c8-fda484b3bba6.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Now, the initial variable X Lorenz dominates the transformed Y and the upper bound is the interesting case.</p><p>When <img src="15-1500255\7e41921e-ac46-4d88-aa76-acc16793dc31.jpg" /> in (16), then</p><p><img src="15-1500255\b43720ef-1ad5-4496-8d1d-fc0fb7ad21ac.jpg" /></p><p>one obtains</p><p><img src="15-1500255\211f5af3-a54d-44ec-991e-d92c3094b758.jpg" /></p><p>After a shift from p to q, we obtain</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37715"><label>(18)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\483af17c-8a36-44d4-bece-70d4d20c3495.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>Now the upper bound is of interest. Formula (17) is applicable for small values and formula (16) for large values of q. In the following, we consider the difference between the upper bound and the Lorenz curve<img src="15-1500255\52c112c9-2fd9-47fa-bc01-14fc5ab61e63.jpg" />, that is, for small values of q</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37716"><label>. (19)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\116b4b78-a724-47ca-af1e-fbda23c4c381.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>For large values of q, we consider the difference</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37717"><label>. (20)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\543cb2b5-b165-4c00-b980-d3c84732232b.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>In general,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\9f12cbf8-49ff-4981-bc5a-97f22004792d.jpg" />.</p><p>The ratio</p><p><img src="15-1500255\5585c196-05eb-4b51-a37e-5fdb428372b8.jpg" /></p><p>is increasing and consequently,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\4cf27d25-5314-441b-bf83-8ce4e1a42199.jpg" />.</p><p>Now we differentiate <img src="15-1500255\fb0d5a99-8393-49a4-a674-b0929af5c424.jpg" /> and note that</p><p><img src="15-1500255\0ef5fe1e-f7a6-465c-82d1-16db2d129e34.jpg" /></p><p>is increasing and obtain</p><p><img src="15-1500255\7ac131ee-fd23-4611-ab82-45d322390962.jpg" />.</p><p>Consequently <img src="15-1500255\9d171c91-6584-4eae-807f-7613a46ba0d9.jpg" /> is increasing from zero to a maximum for<img src="15-1500255\34bb48ac-5b2c-4010-935b-8d89c84ad96b.jpg" />.</p><p>Now we differentiate <img src="15-1500255\c1fbe49c-9eb8-44da-9389-dcbb7313d02f.jpg" /> and obtain</p><p><img src="15-1500255\a79e74b5-95b1-4d03-804e-5df5d48fc73e.jpg" />.</p><p>Consequently <img src="15-1500255\4b69894b-9e18-442b-867e-555750301744.jpg" /> is decreasing from a maximum to zero. The point denoted<img src="15-1500255\b445fdb6-44d8-4007-87d1-593c2f5afcc0.jpg" />, at which the shift from <img src="15-1500255\6c543111-ba03-4670-88d2-a47d933c3d54.jpg" /> to <img src="15-1500255\a004553b-66fa-4b4c-8f49-249a8ec143be.jpg" /> is performed, satisfies <img src="15-1500255\8e9c3d87-4dd6-4cd5-bee2-772a6efbd306.jpg" />.</p><p>Now,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\3b970600-2e51-4c0e-b1bf-abdc936ecd9b.jpg" />that is,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\3856cc8f-6e2e-4309-b101-10661130a14e.jpg" />.</p><p>This condition is identical with the condition, given above, in which</p><p><img src="15-1500255\63456b4a-f135-4bb4-81ad-ee2443a3af42.jpg" /></p><p>is decreasing.</p><p>Again, the condition</p><p><img src="15-1500255\3a2eda8b-5561-4347-9a28-734c1ae760e9.jpg" /></p><p>can be written</p><p><img src="15-1500255\1dfa946f-8738-4a1c-b534-a5e12ac95b4f.jpg" /></p><p>and we obtain the formula</p><p><img src="15-1500255\21054101-f9c8-40d3-8494-6e7b80b7eb6d.jpg" />that is, the Lorenz curves <img src="15-1500255\7f05937f-d13d-4bba-ad3f-15d9496ebb17.jpg" /> and <img src="15-1500255\13cbbd26-16fc-4ed8-8a32-6df0184da71f.jpg" /> have parallel tangents and the distance between the Lorenz curves is maximal.</p><p>We define the difference function as</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37718"><label>, (21)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\fe338e55-4019-4080-8700-62d3aac01859.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>and the upper bound of <img src="15-1500255\2274bb0c-d9ff-43d6-8e2c-15da30cbeb27.jpg" /> is</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37719"><label>(22)</label><graphic position="anchor" xlink:href="15-1500255\ad5c35af-9316-4b0b-95b4-548af2277fec.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p>In <xref ref-type="fig" rid="fig2">Figure 2</xref>, we sketch the Lorenz curves<img src="15-1500255\a3b13407-7c77-4b03-a86a-61cf76beb613.jpg" />, <img src="15-1500255\87004a36-a6fb-4320-9e06-c2172d1dd9b2.jpg" />, the upper bound <img src="15-1500255\072b2ec6-e4af-40fd-81d2-183de27f1e08.jpg" /> and the difference <img src="15-1500255\1163e275-d2dc-40ae-bc1a-0f24fd98f6dc.jpg" /> between the upper bound <img src="15-1500255\75246449-a260-43f4-8fd3-c6e25639ffce.jpg" /> and<img src="15-1500255\124e0e91-bac9-46f0-8857-7bcededc8afe.jpg" />.</p><p>Now the lower bounds are of minor interest because the initial variable X Lorenz dominates Y. Note that <img src="15-1500255\2e024048-37da-4575-99ce-33265c8bc694.jpg" /> is possible in some situations and the lower bound in (17) can be zero. Note that M can be great and even <img src="15-1500255\056aa71c-b0b7-446e-8af2-0d5091d9ef6d.jpg" /> is possible in some situations and the lower bound in (18) can be even negative.</p><p>Example 1. The Pareto distribution. Consider income X with the Pareto distribution <img src="15-1500255\c68543e8-59c4-4a1a-a2a8-a46c388cc395.jpg" /> and<img src="15-1500255\1f4cf4e2-e223-4182-af07-92f9a84b8098.jpg" />, where <img src="15-1500255\547e8d77-ebc9-4bc2-8302-82192057f51e.jpg" /> and<img src="15-1500255\2e19c135-1c24-41f3-b974-436f678a8882.jpg" />. Now,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\0d485345-b329-4bfd-a19b-800c2964a869.jpg" /></p><p>and the Lorenz curve</p><p><img src="15-1500255\41f23cd1-f096-4266-85f5-356495df4a9e.jpg" />.</p><p>From <img src="15-1500255\a441c884-de46-4748-a7d5-0159d125122e.jpg" /> we obtain<img src="15-1500255\871417b5-3b8e-4034-9997-23c1c4125e76.jpg" />. Let the transformation be <img src="15-1500255\31b65c23-94b0-40b0-b34a-c5b2e3c51031.jpg" /> so that the function <img src="15-1500255\6d09580e-0bdc-4e93-b1f4-69cdb6bad556.jpg" /> is decreasing. We obtain<img src="15-1500255\daf63bfb-b901-467e-8115-bb0ae69b4697.jpg" />, the Lorenz curve</p><p><img src="15-1500255\72cf8f32-2bf5-4f54-980e-52c86cc70669.jpg" />,</p><p><img src="15-1500255\e27052de-2b1b-4697-9c8a-6e911d823481.jpg" />and</p><disp-formula id="scirp.25813-formula37720"><graphic  xlink:href="15-1500255\0d627020-e3b1-424c-a018-25d8d77bf185.jpg"  xlink:type="simple"/></disp-formula><p><img src="15-1500255\532e0142-65b3-4a01-8f21-88dc75511dbe.jpg" /></p><p><img src="15-1500255\c40a6917-13f7-41fe-a272-9ce53c0c0837.jpg" /></p><p>For<img src="15-1500255\54e9d166-23c3-48e0-98af-d95ca2484da0.jpg" />, the ratio</p><p><img src="15-1500255\897f3079-de45-4707-af0c-a3a1fb4a5dfc.jpg" /></p><p>is decreasing, this case being sketched in <xref ref-type="fig" rid="fig1">Figure 1</xref>, and if <img src="15-1500255\dbc56910-1227-4907-a2ea-b63eed1929e7.jpg" /> the ratio</p><p><img src="15-1500255\26a42d6a-5226-41f2-bbbc-dbd1cba595d9.jpg" /></p><p>is increasing, this case being sketched in <xref ref-type="fig" rid="fig2">Figure 2</xref>.</p></sec></sec><sec id="s4"><title>4. Conclusion</title><p>Redistributions of income have commonly been defined as variable transformations of the initial income variable. The transformations are mainly considered as tax or transfer policies yielding post-tax or post-transfer incomes and therefore, the transformations are usually assumed to be positive, monotone-increasing and continuous. Recently, discontinuous transformations have also been discussed. The fundamental concern has been the Lorenz ordering between the initial and the transformed income. In this study we constructed limits for he transformed Lorenz curves. We considered the optimal cases that the transformed variable Lorenz dominates the initial one and the initial variable Lorenz dominates the transformed one. In applications, the first case is more important than the second, because it yields policies which reduce the inequality. The case (2) in Theorem 2 is not included in this study because the initial and the transformed Lorenz curves are identical. The limits obtained hold generally for all distributions and a broad class of transformations. If one pursues general conditions the inequalities obtained cannot be improved.</p></sec><sec id="s5"><title>5. Acknowledgements</title><p>We are grateful to an anonymous referee for comments and suggestions on a previous version of the manuscript. This study was in part supported by a grant from the “Magnus Ehrnrooths Stiftelse” Foundation.</p></sec><sec id="s6"><title>REFERENCES</title></sec></body><back><ref-list><title>References</title><ref id="scirp.25813-ref1"><label>1</label><mixed-citation publication-type="other" xlink:type="simple">J. Fellman, “The Effect of Transformations on Lorenz Curves,” Econometrica, Vol. 44, No. 4, 1976, pp. 823-824. doi:10.2307/1913450</mixed-citation></ref><ref id="scirp.25813-ref2"><label>2</label><mixed-citation publication-type="other" xlink:type="simple">U. 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