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@article{ Jansen2013,
 title = {Income Inequality Decomposition, Russia 1992-2002:
Method and Application},
 author = {Jansen, Wim and Dessens, Jos and Verhoven, Willem-Jan},
 journal = {Studies of Transition States and Societies},
 number = {2},
 pages = {21-34},
 volume = {5},
 year = {2013},
 issn = {1736-8758},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-365254},
 abstract = {Decomposition methods for income inequality measures, such as the Gini index and the members of the Generalised Entropy family, are widely applied. Most methods decompose income inequality into a between (explained) and a within (unexplained) part, according to two or more population subgroups or income sources. In this article, we use a regression analysis for a lognormal distribution of personal income, modelling both the mean and the variance, decomposing the variance as a measure of income inequality, and apply the method to survey data from Russia spanning the first decade of market transition (1992-2002). For the first years of the transition, only a small part of the income inequality could be explained. Thereafter, between 1996 and 1999, a larger part (up to 40%) could be explained, and ‘winner’ and ‘loser’ categories of the transition could be spotted. Moving to the upper end of the income distribution, the self-employed won from the transition. The unemployed were among the losers.},
 keywords = {Russland; Russia; Transition; transition; Marktwirtschaft; market economy; Einkommensunterschied; difference in income; Einkommensverteilung; income distribution; postkommunistische Gesellschaft; post-communist society}}