Closed lpicci96 closed 1 year ago
what has been the general trend in inequality?
Generally inequality has improved over time in all regions of the world. Of course this has happened at different rates, and some regions still have significantly high inequality scores. Some regions eg. Africa have not reached the initial level of other regions eg Europe. There is also a plateau for some regions. These are some trends that could be dug into
How does inequality vary on a country level
You can see generally inequality is concentrated in poorer countries and especially African countries. However with different distributions. There should be a way to show that although inequality is higher generally in these countries that spread is large
We could use histograms to show the spread of inequality generally across regions:
It would be interesting to tie in population to see generally where do most women live in terms of areas with higher/lower inequality. Plus could extrapolate some stats
A bubble chart like this could be useful to tie in the population dimension to get a sense of where people live, adjust the view for varying country populations
For SSA there has not been much change since 1990
How does inequality vary on a country level
You can see generally inequality is concentrated in poorer countries and especially African countries. However with different distributions. There should be a way to show that although inequality is higher generally in these countries that spread is large
these look great. I agree that including the feminization of poverty is really important, and I like the cross-comparison of population. as the measurement of equality is fairly wonky, I'd suggest replacing the vertical lines (in the population bubble chart) to be marked less-more equal.
@MIveson92 these are exploratory and defunct now. I will add the new charts below for your comments
exploratory analysis of visualizations showing gender inequality. These will be initial visualizations for the beginning of the page exploring the state of inequality using HDR indicators on gender, and possibly other data sources