Income inequality: Gini coefficient in Latin America

What you should know about this indicator
This is current household income. "Current" means that all income sources are added, including labor income, pensions, capital and benefits and transfers. Income has been equivalized – adjusted to account for the fact that people in the same household can share costs like rent and heating.
Sources and processing
This data is based on the following sources
How we process data at
All data and visualizations on rely on data sourced from one or several original data providers. Preparing this original data involves several processing steps. Depending on the data, this can include standardizing country names and world region definitions, converting units, calculating derived indicators such as per capita measures, as well as adding or adapting metadata such as the name or the description given to an indicator.
At the link below you can find a detailed description of the structure of our data pipeline, including links to all the code used to prepare data across .
Notes on our processing step for this indicator
Where there were multiple observations for a particular year, we selected the observation drawn from a more recent round of a survey, or, in the case of biannual surveys, the observation drawn from the second semester.
The data is originally presented in separate survey rounds for each country, given different methodologies and aggregation levels considered. For this reason, these survey rounds are not directly comparable. Due to visualization limitations, we have connected each country series. For more detailed analysis, you can check these survey rounds on the .
Reuse this work
- All data produced by third-party providers and made available by are subject to the license terms from the original providers. Our work would not be possible without the data providers we rely on, so we ask you to always cite them appropriately (see below). This is crucial to allow data providers to continue doing their work, enhancing, maintaining and updating valuable data.
- All data, visualizations, and code produced by are completely open access under the . You have the permission to use, distribute, and reproduce these in any medium, provided the source and authors are credited.
Citations
How to cite this page
To cite this page overall, including any descriptions, FAQs or explanations of the data authored by , please use the following citation:
“Data Page: Income inequality: Gini coefficient in Latin America”, part of the following publication: Joe Hasell, Bertha Rohenkohl, Pablo Arriagada, Esteban Ortiz-Ospina, and Max Roser (2022) - “Poverty”. Data adapted from SEDLAC (CEDLAS and The World Bank). Retrieved from /grapher/income-inequality-in-latin-america [online resource]
How to cite this data
In-line citationIf you have limited space (e.g. in data visualizations), you can use this abbreviated in-line citation:
SEDLAC (CEDLAS and The World Bank) (2024) – with major processing by
Full citation
SEDLAC (CEDLAS and The World Bank) (2024) – with major processing by . “Income inequality: Gini coefficient in Latin America” [dataset]. SEDLAC (CEDLAS and The World Bank), “Socio-Economic Database for Latin America and the Caribbean (SEDLAC)” [original data]. Retrieved April 28, 2025 from /grapher/income-inequality-in-latin-america