Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5097645 Journal of Econometrics 2006 17 Pages PDF
Abstract
The practical relevance of several concepts of exogeneity of treatments for the estimation of causal parameters based on observational data are discussed. We show that the traditional concepts, such as strong ignorability and weak and super-exogeneity, are too restrictive if interest lies in average effects (i.e. not on distributional effects of the treatment). We suggest a new definition of exogeneity, KL-exogeneity. It does not rely on distributional assumptions and is not based on counterfactual random variables. As a consequence it can be empirically tested using a proposed test that is simple to implement and is distribution-free.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Statistics and Probability
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