In probability, statistics, economics, and actuarial science, the Benini distribution is a continuous probability distribution that is a statistical size distribution often applied to model incomes, severity of claims or losses in actuarial applications, and other economic data.[1][2] Its tail behavior decays faster than a power law, but not as fast as an exponential. This distribution was introduced by Rodolfo Benini in 1905.[3] Somewhat later than Benini's original work, the distribution has been independently discovered or discussed by a number of authors.[4]
where , shape parameters α, β > 0, and σ > 0 is a scale parameter.
For parsimony, Benini[3] considered only the two-parameter model (with α = 0), with CDF
The density of the two-parameter Benini model is
Simulation
A two-parameter Benini variable can be generated by the inverse probability transform method. For the two-parameter model, the quantile function (inverse CDF) is
The two-parameter Benini distribution density, probability distribution, quantile function and random-number generator are implemented in the VGAM package for R, which also provides maximum-likelihood estimation of the shape parameter.[5]
^Kleiber, Christian; Kotz, Samuel (2003). "Chapter 7.1: Benini Distribution". Statistical Size Distributions in Economics and Actuarial Sciences. Wiley. ISBN978-0-471-15064-0.
^A. Sen and J. Silber (2001). Handbook of Income Inequality Measurement, Boston:Kluwer, Section 3: Personal Income Distribution Models.
^ abBenini, R. (1905). I diagrammi a scala logaritmica (a proposito della graduazione per valore delle successioni ereditarie in Italia, Francia e Inghilterra). Giornale degli Economisti, Series II, 16, 222–231.
^See the references in Kleiber and Kotz (2003), p. 236.