Multiple Choice

A country's law mandates a new wealth redistribution tax if its Gini coefficient for wealth is calculated to be above 0.90. An initial analysis, using a common approximation method based on the ratio of areas in a wealth distribution graph, yields a coefficient of exactly 0.90. A government agency, seeking maximum precision, commissions a second analysis on the same data using a method that computes the average difference across all possible pairs of individuals. Based on the typical relationship between these two calculation methods, what is the most probable outcome of the second analysis and its policy implication?

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Updated 2025-09-18

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