Abstract

A society or country with income equally distributed among its people is truly a fiction! The phenomena of socioeconomic inequalities have been plaguing mankind from times immemorial. We are interested in gaining an insight about the co-evolution of the countries in the inequality space, from a data science perspective. For this purpose, we use the time series data for Gini indices of different countries, and construct the equaltime cross-correlation matrix. We then use this to construct a similarity matrix and generate a map with the countries as different points generated through a multi-dimensional scaling technique. We also produce a similar map of different countries using the time series data for Gross Domestic Savings (% of GDP). We also pose a different, yet significant, question: Can higher savings moderate the income inequality? In this paper, we have tried to address this question through another data science technique – linear regression, to seek an empirical linkage between the income inequality and savings, mainly for relatively small or closed economies. This question was inspired from an existing theoretical model proposed by Chakraborti-Chakrabarti (2000), based on the principle of kinetic theory of gases. We tested our model empirically using Gini index and Gross Domestic Savings, and observed that the model holds reasonably true for many economies of the world.

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