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Feedback about the Gini coefficient #22

@rafasashi

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@rafasashi

Hello there,

Thank you for this article about Gini coefficient applied to the cryptocurrency.

I know this is probably not the place to leave my comment so I will make this issue about suggesting you to activate Github Discussions for that matter.

This being said, I don't know how much time you put into documenting yourself before summing all this up into flawless articles but I admire your talent and above all your perseverance in the face of obstacles on your quest to extinguish inequalities.

I particularly like this post because among other things, it reminds me of my time as a student of Financial Analysis. It was right after the subprime mortgage crisis and I could not connect the dots between risk, debt, valuation, income and who gets to get bailed out.

In other words I needed and still need to define the concept of "wealth" in a world dominated by the rules of economics where researchers and other intellectuals will probably never agree on one way to define and represent this concept because it is a problem involving "ideological recursiveness" (if such a thing exists).

Back to your post, I agree with the conclusion.

Unfortunately I do not possess the mathematical background nor the type of brain to picture the inconsistency of the Gini coefficient applied to cryptocurrency like you do. In fact my understanding stopped at the dotted line telling me:

No one possessing nothing = everyone possessing everything

Furthermore I cannot stop asking myself how one can measure inequality without first defining "wealth"?

Don't get me wrong, I am not aiming at the structure of your article, I am questioning the ability of mono-criterion models to represent any situation, regardless of their complexity, when the main criteria is not defined within the model itself in a recursive manner.

In the case of Gini coefficient applied to inequalities what I mean is that in the real life the definition of wealth changes from one culture to another, the local challenges and as we move up in social and economic status.

The same observation can be made about our voting systems, our risk management models, our economic forecasting...

In my opinion if you want to analyze the relation between cryptocurrency and inequalities I suggest to try "multiple-criteria decision analysis" and "multi-objective optimization".

A multi-criteria paradigm not only defines a list of criteria being used to represent the problem but also requires the object to interact directly with your model during the research.

It starts simply with step by step survey and it ends with complex math as usual :D

Step 1 - to prepare a list of criteria defining "wealth" in a specific part of the world at a specific time

Step 2 - to conduct a "survey" asking people from different background to order the list from the most important criteria to the least, let's call it the "profile" (this can dramatically change the definition of inequality from one place/group to another ).

Step 3 - to ask people to apply a coefficient for each criteria for example asking: "how holding crypto affects your situation in term of criteria N (I guess this step will also dramatically change the results depending on the local regulations regarding crypto)

Step 4 - to use a model to visualize the effect of crypto on inequalities according to each profiles defined in Step 2. (I guess we should see similar profiles depending on the social status in a specific place)

Step 5 - to eventually extrapolate in a way a multi-profile analysis could be made

What do you think about this method?

In the meantime I wish everyone a great day!

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