Endogenous Stratification in Randomized Experiments (LIDS-SSRC Seminar)

Tuesday, March 3, 2015 - 4:00pm to Wednesday, March 4, 2015 - 3:55pm

Event Calendar Category

LIDS Seminar Series

Speaker Name

Alberto Abadie

Affiliation

Harvard University

Building and Room Number

32-155

Researchers and policy makers are often interested in estimating how policy interventions affect the outcomes of those individuals most in need of help. For example, a researcher may be interested in estimating the effect of financial aid on college enrollment for those students who are likely to drop out of college in the absence of financial aid. This concern has motivated the widespread practice of estimating policy effects separately by brackets of the predicted outcomes that the individuals in a sample would attain in the absence of a policy intervention. This presentation will discuss how substantial biases may arise in practice if predicted outcomes in the absence of the intervention are estimated, as is often the case, using the full sample of individuals not exposed to the intervention. We analyze the behavior of leave-one-out and repeated split sample estimators and show that they behave well in realistic scenarios, correcting the large bias problem of the full sample estimator. We use data from the National JTPA Study and the Tennessee STAR experiment to demonstrate the performance of alternative estimators and the magnitude of their biases.

Alberto Abadie is a professor of public policy at Harvard University, where he teaches advanced quantitative methods and program evaluation. His research focuses on econometrics, statistics, causal inference, and program evaluation. Prof. Abadie’s methodological research focuses on statistical methods to estimate causal effects and, in particular, the effects of public policies, such as labor market, education, and health policy interventions. As a native of the Basque Country, he has long been interested in issues concerning terrorism. In some of his most applied research, Prof. Abadie uses data and economic models to analyze the causes and consequences of terrorism and political violence. He received his PhD in economics from MIT.