Income inequality (Gini coefficient) in Chile

In 2024, the Gini coefficient of income inequality in Chile was 43.0, down from 43.2 in 2022. Explore the historical series and compare Chile with other economies below.
Income inequality (Gini coefficient)
Gini index (0 = complete equality, 100 = complete inequality)
Chile
YearValue
202443.0
2023
202243.2
2021
202047.0
2019
2018
201745.3
2016
201545.3
2014
201346.8
2012
201146.9
2010
200947.4
2008
2007
200647.7
2005
2004
200351.5
2002
2001
200052.8
How Chile compares
Income inequality (Gini coefficient) compared with other countries
Income inequality (Gini coefficient)
About this indicator
Income inequality (Gini coefficient) measures how unequally income is distributed across a society. The Gini index ranges from 0 (everyone has the same income) to 100 (one person has all income). A higher value means greater inequality. The index is calculated by comparing the cumulative share of the population (ranked from poorest to richest) with the cumulative share of total income they receive.
Estimates are drawn from household surveys and reflect the distribution among individuals or households in each country. A higher Gini therefore signals a less equal distribution of economic resources.
Sources and updates

Data sources

The data for this indicator are drawn from the World Bank Poverty and Inequality Platform (PIP), via the World Development Indicators.

Last update

This indicator was last updated on Econorama on 18 June 2026 and reflects the latest data available from the underlying sources at that time.