# Simple question regarding ratio and average

I have 2 lists of numbers (with an equal number of numbers in each). Each number is then divided by the number of which it is paired with (by index), and a ratio is received.

I then want to calculate the global average ratio, so I try 2 ways:

1. Sum all numbers in each column, and divide one with the other.
2. Make an average of all ratios I have received from the calculation above.

Both give me different results.

How could that be? And what would be considered the true global ratio average?

## Example lists:

1  : 1 = 1
2  : 1 = 2
3  : 2 = 1.5
4  : 2 = 2
-----------
1.625 average
10 : 6 = 1.667

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Could you give a simple example with, say, two lists with three numbers? I don't understand what you mean by "Each number is then divided by the number of which it is paired with". – Arturo Magidin Nov 9 '11 at 17:52
The actual list is 27 numbers long, but I can do that. – Madara Uchiha Nov 9 '11 at 17:56
I don't need the whole list; I'm just trying to understand what your description says. I'm having a lot of trouble parsing "divided by the number of which it is paired with". – Arturo Magidin Nov 9 '11 at 17:59
@ArturoMagidin I think the OP means the following. List 1: (1,2,3) and List 2: (4,5,6). Then one way to compute ratios is (1/4, 2/5, 3/6) and another way is to do: (1+2+3)/(4+5+6) – tards Nov 9 '11 at 18:01
As demonstrated in the example. Yes. I'm sorry for the disinformation, I think like a programmer, not a mathematician :P – Madara Uchiha Nov 9 '11 at 18:03

How could that be?

It is more instructive to regard just the case of lists of length 2:

You want to have

$$\frac{a}{c}+\frac{b}{d} = \frac{a+b}{c+d}.$$

But this is almost never true, there is a reason for the more complicated way to add fractions.

With 27 numbers, it does not get better.

Edit:

what would be considered the true global ratio average?

It depends on your situation what you want to calculate. For example, let's say you know of every person in a country: how much they earn and how much they spend on food.

1. Sum all numbers in each column, and divide one with the other.

• This gives you the ratio of the averages, which tells you what percentage of the total income in the country is spent on food.

• Outliers (in this case, the few very rich people who spend a relatively high amount on food) significantly influence the ratio of the averages.

• Use this if you want to know how food price rises impact the part of the economy that produces and sells food

2. Make an average of all ratios from the calculation above.

• This gives you the average of the ratios, which tells you the average percentage people spend on food.

• Outliers have less of an effect.

• Use this if you want to know how food price rises impact people

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Very odd, it's very intuitive to think that the average of radios is the ratio of sums. What would you call "the Global average" though? – Madara Uchiha Nov 9 '11 at 18:02
I personally tend to think that the average of ratios is better, because otherwise by computing the ratio of the averages you are loosing information (= the mapping between numbers of the numerator and numbers of the denominator) – Antoine Jul 22 '15 at 3:05

The answer to your first question is the observation that $\frac{a}{b} + \frac{c}{d}$ is in general not equal to $\frac{a+c}{b+d}$. In other words, the average of ratios is not necessarily equal to the ratio of sums.

As regards the true global ratio average is concerned- I think the answer is context specific. A meaningful answer can only be given if you could shed some light on the nature of the numbers you have.

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Asking which is "the true global ratio average" brings you very close to Simpson's paradox where, for example, treatment A can be better for men than treatment B, and also better for women, but worse overall. There is an active literature on how to deal with the paradox when it arises.

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