Rank-optimal weighting or "How to be best in the OECD Better Life Index?"
Jan Lorenz, Christoph Brauer, Dirk A. Lorenz

TL;DR
This paper introduces a mathematical optimization method to determine the best possible ranking position of countries in the OECD Better Life Index by identifying optimal weights for composite indicators, revealing potential ranking improvements.
Contribution
It presents a novel rank-optimal weighting approach that computes the maximum achievable rank for each country, providing bounds for normative weighting and sensitivity analysis in rankings.
Findings
19 out of 36 countries can be ranked first with specific weights.
Many countries achieve top ranks by emphasizing their strongest dimensions.
The method offers a way to explore the best possible ranking positions through optimized weights.
Abstract
We present a method of rank-optimal weighting which can be used to explore the best possible position of a subject in a ranking based on a composite indicator by means of a mathematical optimization problem. As an example, we explore the dataset of the OECD Better Life Index and compute for each country a weight vector which brings it as far up in the ranking as possible with the greatest advance of the immediate rivals. The method is able to answer the question "What is the best possible rank a country can achieve with a given set of weighted indicators?" Typically, weights in composite indicators are justified normatively and not empirically. Our approach helps to give bounds on what is achievable by such normative judgments from a purely output-oriented and strongly competitive perspective. The method can serve as a basis for exact bounds in sensitivity analysis focused on ranking…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life · History and advancements in chemistry · Multi-Criteria Decision Making
