Last updated: May 2026 · Economics term — not a stock-picking indicator.
This page explains Gini coefficient in plain language for Indian investors reading market terminology.
The Gini coefficient (also called the Gini index) measures inequality in a distribution — often income or wealth in a country. It ranges from 0 (perfect equality) toward 1 (maximum inequality). Investors see it in macro reports, not on a stock screener.

Gini coefficient — quick reference
| Value (approx.) | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| 0.25–0.35 | Relatively lower inequality (many European countries) |
| 0.35–0.45 | Mid range (many emerging economies) |
| Above 0.50 | High inequality (fewer countries) |
Why investors encounter Gini
- Macro research on consumption and savings
- ESG / social impact reports (inequality context)
- Exam and interview questions — not demat onboarding
For broker decisions, use charge tables and platform fit — compare brokers — not Gini scores.
Gini vs other terms
| Term | Measures |
|---|---|
| Gini coefficient | Inequality in a distribution |
| P/E ratio | Price vs earnings (one company) |
| Market cap | Size of a listed company |
FAQ
Is a low Gini country always a better stock market?
No direct link. Equity returns depend on earnings, rates, and valuations — not one inequality statistic.
Where is India’s Gini published?
Look to official statistics (NSS, World Bank, IMF) for the series you need — figures vary by methodology and year.
More terminology: Terminology category · rational thinking.
FAQs
What is the Gini coefficient?
A number from 0 to 1 that measures inequality in a distribution (often income or wealth).
Is a higher Gini bad?
Higher values mean more inequality; interpretation depends on context and country.
Do investors use Gini on stocks?
Rarely for trading; it appears more in macro and policy discussions.
In portfolio discussions, inequality metrics like Gini are sometimes cited alongside index concentration. They do not replace company-level analysis.

