Magis wrote: Your opponent is potentially correct on this point. The first estimator will be biased if it systematically under predicts the parameter being estimated. However, just because the second estimator can both under predict and over predict the parameter doesn't mean that it's unbiased.
Do you mean just because the second estimator can both under predict and over predict the parameter doesn't mean that its biased, rather than unbiased?
Magis wrote: Your opponent is correct. A biased estimator is one whose expected value differs from the true value of the parameter.
No that was what I thought bias meant as well. Its just that if a estimator overestimates or underestimates, why should it not be considered bias? When I queried that he just restated what I defined bias as, but in the manner which you see above. In other words he is not actually trying to explain it, but just restating a definition, which could be because he himself doesn't understand it and is bluffing.
Look at it this way. Let's say you're interested in the mean of some population, so you take some N samples of that population. The mean of the samples is not likely to be the mean of the population (example: the mean of 100 samples of human bodyweights is not likely to be the same as the mean human bodyweight of the entire human population). In fact, if you take N samples and calculate the sample mean, and then take another N samples, and calculate their sample mean, the two samples means will be both different from each other and different from the population mean, except in very convenient situations. However, the sample mean is an unbiased estimator of the population mean because if you were to take an infinite number of N samples,and then take the average of the infinite number of sample means, it would be the same as the population mean. This is equivalent to saying that the expected value of the estimator is the same as the true population parameter.
That should answer your question about unbiased estimators.
So an unbiased estimator is simply one where it should match the parameter we are measuring if we take sufficient samples, but it can be inaccurate if we take insufficient samples?
But the question I think you should be asking is, "Why is an unbiased estimator necessary for your discussion"?
That's a good point. He was the one who brought it up when he was losing which is something presumably he feels more comfortable discussing. I had simplistically assumed that bias would refer to when you overestimate or underestimate so I was puzzled why he kept on bringing it up.
In fact, I'm not sure why the two of you are considering GDP/capita as estimators in the first place. They are estimating what parameter of a distribution? Estimators are functions to estimate population parameters using sample statistics. I'm confused by the entire statistical context of your debate, so maybe I'm the one missing something here.
Would you like the long story or the short version?
Essentially the GDP / capita issue was a side track from the main trust but has been hilarious for me as he misreads several things, quotes from sources and then rejects them when they don't give the answer he wants (no he says wiki sucks in the same post he uses a wiki link to justify his position and ignores the fact that I used the wiki page purely because it summarised all the results from various sources like the world bank, IMF conveniently on one page), believes he knows more than the IMF, and now is essentially saying the World Bank methodology sucks (even though he used the World Bank figures when it suited him).
Back to the original topic. He feels that the success of a country's cultural products in this case television shows / movies (ie who can we get to buy these), is predominantly dependent on that country having a high GDP / capita because people would like to copy the lifestyle of such a rich country. This is strange of course when you consider the most successful movie, Jame's Cameron Avatar had the American lifestyle of polluting your world and killing natives, and I am not sure how many people want to copy that lifestyle.
In other words, not all successful films show a glamourous American lifestyle. Or to put it another way, the country with a lower gdp/ capita would tend to gravitate and buy films from one with a higher gdp / capita based purely that they are poorer than the rich country, and they want to ape that lifestyle of the richer country. To be fair, he later concedes thats not the only reason but he feels its a very important one.
I feel the success of a film was mainly dependent on production values (ie special effects, script, etc) and that being rich ie having a high GDP / capita is less important than market size. So I feel having a high GDP/capita can contribute, but not in the same way he does. Whereas he feels just having one makes people want to copy the lifestyle of the rich country and buy their stuff, I feel its mainly secondary to allowing them to put in high production values in their shows/movies.
Going on, as I said having a high GDP/capita is actually secondary to a large market. For example China has a "middle income" range of GDP / capita while Australia has a high income GDP / capita. Yet Chinese films (if you watch the higher budget) have a much higher production values than what we churn out because of their market size. To go another direction, Norway has a higher GDP per capita, yet in Australia we can't actually watch Norway films in our cinemas. We show Chinese and Indian films in selected major cinemas, even though they have a much lower gdp/capita than us, whereas Norway is higher than us.
Now that I have set the stage, lets explain where this sidetrack came from. I pointed out Australia buys predominantly American shows both when our gdp / capita was lower and we still continue to do it even though in the last few years we are higher. If my hypothesis is correct, we should still continue to buy their shows as long as their shows have higher production values than ours despite us having a higher gdp/capita. If his hypothesis is correct, we should stop buying / buy less because we now have a higher gdp/capita and now longer need to ape their inferior lifestyle.
So it becomes necessary for him to argue that Australia has a lower gdp / capita. The problem is most major sources from the World Bank, IMF, UN, CIA factbook all list us as having a higher GDP /capita than the US. At least in nominal terms. He tries to dispute this in two ways
1. All those sources are bullshit - because they don't show a drop in Australian GDP/capita with the fall in the Australian dollar. They do (he simply can't count), but then he comes up with, "ah but they don't fall enough". This comes about because those sources uses an average value of exchange rates to counter fluctuations whereas he prefers any exchange rate number which gives him victory. At this point he has disputed World Bank methodology even though earlier he used world bank figures. Go figure.
This is where he is losing quite bad so we get to the second point.
2. He will at the same time argue purchasing power parity is a better measure of gdp/capita because it shows the US having a higher gdp/capita in PPP terms.
Going on, unlike your bodyweight example, its harder to get an objective number of size of economy. Let me explain. If we have two countries we can simply take their GDP in their local currency and using an average exchange rate convert it to a third currency usually US dollars. We can therefore compare who has the largest economy. We can also do that with GDP / capita. This is assuming of course both countries trade internationally, unlike say the old USSR. This is of course GDP/nominal. Now some countries have a lower cost of living, so one dollar in China buys more than one dollar in the US. So economists try to take this into account and come up with what's called purchasing power parity. PPP has the risk of overestimating a country's economy (famously when the World Bank cut China's economy by 40% in 2008 in PPP terms) and then increased it again in 2014 in PPP terms (hence it had underestimated) it. So unlike body weight, a kilogram in China is the same as a kilogram in the US, but a dollar in China isn't the same as a dollar in the US, in the sense it can buy more.
Now obviously this "real value" of the economy is hard to pin down. Basically if PPP has country x has a larger gdp/capita, for a given year, is it really? Could be. But we could have overestimated it as witnessed by those revisions I talked about. If nominal measurements has country x with the larger gdp/capita, I am more certain this is correct because it underestimates it. For this season and being a conservative fellow myself, I simply just use the nominal figure. Obviously his entire argument is now dependent on Australia not having a higher gdp/capita and is essentially saying despite all this, PPP is an unbias marker so should be used irregardless of whether it overestimates or underestimates. As I said I had simply assumed bias means that the value of gdp/capita given in either PPP or nominal terms is not the same as the "hypothetical real value" so was puzzled as to why he kept on insisting it was non bias. When I asked he simply restates the definition in a different manner.
I suspect based on what you are saying, he is using estimators in an incorrect fashion.
Never apologise for being a geek, because they won't apologise to you for being an arsehole. John Barrowman - 22 June 2014 Perth Supernova.
Countries I have been to - 14.
Australia, Canada, China, Colombia, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, Germany, Malaysia, Netherlands, Norway, Singapore, Sweden, USA.
Always on the lookout for more nice places to visit.