In probability and statistics, a mean-preserving spread (MPS)[1] is a change from one probability distribution A to another probability distribution B, where B is formed by spreading out one or more portions of A's probability density function or probability mass function while leaving the mean (the expected value) unchanged. As such, the concept of mean-preserving spreads provides a stochastic ordering of equal-mean gambles (probability distributions) according to their degree of risk; this ordering is partial, meaning that of two equal-mean gambles, it is not necessarily true that either is a mean-preserving spread of the other. Distribution A is said to be a mean-preserving contraction of B if B is a mean-preserving spread of A.
Ranking gambles by mean-preserving spreads is a special case of ranking gambles by second-order stochastic dominance - namely, the special case of equal means: If B is a mean-preserving spread of A, then A is second-order stochastically dominant over B; and the converse holds if A and B have equal means.
If B is a mean-preserving spread of A, then B has a higher variance than A and the expected values of A and B are identical; but the converse is not in general true, because the variance is a complete ordering while ordering by mean-preserving spreads is only partial.
This example shows that to have a mean-preserving spread does not require that all or most of the probability mass move away from the mean.[2] Let A have equal probabilities
1/100
xAi
xAi=198
i=1,...,50
xAi=202
i=51,...,100
1/100
xBi
xB1=100
xBi=200
i=2,...,99
xB100=300
Let
xA
xB
xB\overset{d}{=}(xA+z)
z
E(z\midxA)=0
xA
\overset{d}{=}
FA
FB
FA
x
FB
x
x
x
Both of these mathematical definitions replicate those of second-order stochastic dominance for the case of equal means.
If B is a mean-preserving spread of A then A will be preferred by all expected utility maximizers having concave utility. The converse also holds: if A and B have equal means and A is preferred by all expected utility maximizers having concave utility, then B is a mean-preserving spread of A.
. Andreu Mas-Colell . Whinston . M. D. . Green . J. R. . Microeconomic Theory . 1995 . New York . Oxford University Press . 197–199 . 0-19-510268-1 . .