Typo in the Gujarati book

blueturtle

New Member
Hi all,

In my edition of Gujarati's Essentials of econometrics, the sense of Chebyshev inequality (eq. 3.20, page 57, and example 3.21) is wrong.

No big deal but I've already scratched my head in the past for such small details...

The official site of the book does not provide any errata list.

So if you spot any other errors, you may use this thread to report them.
 

blueturtle

New Member
The inequality 3.20 should be :

P(abs(X-mu_x) <= c.sigma_x) >= 1-1/c^2

instead of :

P(abs(X-mu_x) >= c.sigma_x) >= 1-1/c^2
 

blueturtle

New Member
Oops, I meant :

'The inequality 3.20 should be :

P(abs(X-mu_x) <= c.sigma_x) >= 1-1/c^2

instead of :

P(abs(X-mu_x) <= c.sigma_x) <= 1-1/c^2 '
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
Ah, nice catch! I missed it, thank you (fortunately, my notes/slide are correct b/c i carried forward last year's usage which instead expresses the P[outside the region] which is a less than). David
 

saket03

New Member
Think another very small error is in Chapter 3 on page no. 67. Leptpokurtic has been defined as having slim or long-tailed and Platykurtic is defined as having fat or short-tailed. This shd actually be reverse.
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
That's interesting. Please note in the FRM, leptokurtosis implies kurtosis > 3 (i.e., excess kurtosis > 0). Without disagreeing with you, just for exam purposes, i would note that leptokurtosis associates with "fat" or "heavy" tails.

But I find your note interesting b/c kurtosis is fourth moment function and really, I think, is a matter of the PEAKEDNESS of the function. So, leptokurtosis implies, first, higher peaks. Then, we typically say, okay, higher peaks implies fatter tails. But I *think* (do correct me if you know better) we really mean: longer, skinnier tails. It seems to me that, strictly speaking, fat tails is ambiguous; fat tails suggests a vertical metric in the tail but we really mean more density in the extremes (which involves a horizontal perspective) but this can look long and skinny (!?)

All in, as i think about this, "heavy tails" now seems more descriptive as it avoids the vertical fat/skinny idea. Curious if you would agree: leptokurtosis = "heavy tails"?

David
 

saket03

New Member
Thanks for this David.

Agree with you on the interpretation of "fat" tails as "heavy" tails.

I am very new to this Forum and this website but I have found it to be of immese value.

My Compliments to you!
 
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