Objective
This study evaluates the bias to inequality measurement from survey nonrespondents.
Methods
Sixty‐six Luxembourg Income Study surveys for 38 middle‐ and high‐income countries, encompassing some 900,000 households, are used to derive estimates of the Gini coefficient for countries and selected world regions.
Results
Household nonresponse typically biases national Ginis downward by 1–8 percentage points. The Gini for North America appears robust to nonresponse, rising by a mere 0.34 percentage points to 44.72 when a correction is applied. The Gini for the European Union Single Market is sensitive to nonresponse, rising by 5.52 percentage points to 37.63. The OECD‐wide Gini rises by 5.93 points to 44.58.
Conclusion
These results appear consistent with one another and with prior evidence. They suggest that, across countries and selected world regions, household nonresponse biases the Ginis downward by 1–8 percentage points.