Patterns of Effects and Sensitivity Analysis for Differences-in-Differences

01/07/2019
by   Luke J. Keele, et al.
0

Applied analysts often use the differences-in-differences (DID) method to estimate the causal effect of policy interventions with observational data. The method is widely used, as the required before and after comparison of a treated and control group is commonly encountered in practice. DID removes bias from unobserved time-invariant confounders. While DID removes bias from time-invariant confounders, bias from time-varying confounders may be present. Hence, like any observational comparison, DID studies remain susceptible to bias from hidden confounders. Here, we develop a method of sensitivity analysis that allows investigators to quantify the amount of bias necessary to change a study's conclusions. Our method operates within a matched design that removes bias from observed baseline covariates. We develop methods for both binary and continuous outcomes. We then apply our methods to two different empirical examples from the social sciences. In the first application, we study the effect of changes to disability payments in Germany. In the second, we re-examine whether election day registration increased turnout in Wisconsin.

READ FULL TEXT
research
04/02/2020

On Interactions Between Observed and Unobserved Covariates in Matched Observational Studies

In observational studies, it is typically unrealistic to assume that tre...
research
09/15/2020

Constructing a More Closely Matched Control Group in a Difference-in-Differences Analysis: Its Effect on History Interacting with Group Bias

Difference-in-differences analysis with a control group that differs con...
research
08/30/2021

Eliminating Systematic Bias from Difference-in-Differences Design: A Permutational Detrending Strategy

Since the initial work by Ashenfelter and Card in 1985, the use of diffe...
research
01/18/2021

A deterministic matching method for exact matchings to compare the outcome of different interventions

Statistical matching methods are widely used in the social and health sc...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset