Published in Electronic Journ@l for History of Probability and Statistics, vol. 1, n.1; March 2005. Early Gini’s Contributions to Inequality Measurement and Statistical Inference ANTONIO FORCINA 1 and GIOVANNI MARIA GIORGI 2 Abstract. In this paper we review the seminal contributions to the measurement of inequality in income and wealth that Gini made towards the beginning of his scientific career. We also show that in his early work on probability and inference contained a clear anticipation of the notions of overdispersion and exchangeability. 1. Introduction Corrado Gini was born in 1884 in Motta di Livenza (Province of Treviso) in the North East of Italy, he graduated at Bologna University in 1905 with a degree in Law, the only Faculty where Statistics was taught as a subject at that time. His dissertation, a throughout investigation into the distribution of the sex ratio in human populations, later became a book [Gini, 1908a] and is an early example of the wide range of his scientific interests in Demography, Genetics and Biology. Soon his interests extended into Sociology and Economics (see [Giorgi, 2001] and [Regazzini, 1997] for some biographical notes). As far as statistics is concerned, his contributions pertained mainly to descriptive measures of dispersion, concentration, association as well as to foundational aspects of Statistical Inference (see [Forcina,1982] for a critical assessment). In 1920 Gini founded Metron, an international statistical journal: the first issue had a paper by Edgeworth on entomological statistics, the third issue had a paper by L. J. Reed who introduced 1 Department of Statistics, University of Perugia (Italy), forcina@stat.unipg.it 2 Address for correspondence: “La Sapienza“ University , Department of Statistics, Probability and Applied Statistics, Piazzale Aldo Moro n.5, 00185 Roma (Italy), giovanni.giorgi@uniroma1.it