
arXiv: 2001.06118
The method of synthetic controls is a fundamental tool for evaluating causal effects of policy changes in settings with observational data. In many settings where it is applicable, researchers want to identify causal effects of policy changes on a treated unit at an aggregate level while having access to data at a finer granularity. This article proposes an extension of the synthetic controls estimator that takes advantage of this additional structure and provides nonparametric estimates of the heterogeneity within the aggregate unit. The idea is to replicate the quantile function associated with the treated unit by a weighted average of quantile functions of the control units. This estimator relies on the same mathematical theory as the changes‐in‐changes estimator and can be applied in both repeated cross‐sections and panel data with as little as a single pre‐treatment period. It also provides a unique counterfactual quantile function for any type of distribution.
FOS: Computer and information sciences, heterogeneous treatment effects, quantile functions, Econometrics (econ.EM), Causal inference from observational studies, Methodology (stat.ME), FOS: Economics and business, synthetic controls, comparative case studies, Wasserstein distance, causal inference, Applications of statistics to economics, Statistics - Methodology, Economics - Econometrics
FOS: Computer and information sciences, heterogeneous treatment effects, quantile functions, Econometrics (econ.EM), Causal inference from observational studies, Methodology (stat.ME), FOS: Economics and business, synthetic controls, comparative case studies, Wasserstein distance, causal inference, Applications of statistics to economics, Statistics - Methodology, Economics - Econometrics
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