Bosnia and HerzegovinaGini Index

Category: Poverty & InequalitySource: World Bank World Development IndicatorsGlobal Rank: #86 of 115Updated June 2026
Latest Value
33
2011
YoY Change
-0.3%
20072011
Global Rank
#86
of 115 countries
Maximum
34
2004
Minimum
30
2001
CAGR
+1.0%
4 years
Last
33
Previous
33.1
Highest
34
Lowest
30
Unit
Index (0-100)
Source
World Bank World Development Indicators

Bosnia and Herzegovina's gini index was 33 in 2011, ranking #86 out of 115 countries. This represents a -0.3% change from 2007. Over the past 4 years, the highest recorded value was 34 (2004) and the lowest was 30 (2001). Data sourced from the World Bank World Development Indicators.

Source: World Bank World Development Indicators

Historical Data

YearValueChange
201133-0.3%
200733.1-2.6%
200434+13.3%
200130

Top Countries — Gini Index

#CountryValueYear
1Colombia54.42024
2South Africa54.12022
3Zambia51.52022
4Brazil50.32024
5Panama49.72024
6Mozambique49.62022
7Ecuador45.92025
8Honduras45.72024
9Costa Rica45.52025
10Guatemala45.22023
View all 115 countries →

About This Indicator

Definition

The Gini index measures the extent to which the distribution of income among individuals or households within an economy deviates from a perfectly equal distribution. A Gini of 0 represents perfect equality (everyone has the same income), while 100 represents perfect inequality (one person has all the income).

Methodology

The Gini coefficient is calculated from household survey data on income or consumption. The World Bank calculates it from the Lorenz curve, which plots the cumulative share of income against the cumulative share of the population (ranked from poorest to richest). The Gini equals 1 minus twice the area under the Lorenz curve. Data comes from national household surveys harmonized under the World Bank's PovcalNet project.

Unit

Index (0-100)

Source: World Bank - World Development IndicatorsCoverage: 20002024View original source →