The Future Strikes Back. Using Future Treatments to Detect and Reduce Hidden Bias
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Felix Elwert, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Fabian Pfeffer, University of Michigan
Version: View help for Version V1
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Project Citation:
Project Description
Summary:
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Conventional advice discourages controlling for post-outcome variables in regression analysis. Here, we show that controlling for commonly available post-outcome (i.e. future) values of the treatment variable can help detect, reduce, and even remove omitted variable bias (unobserved confounding). The premise is that the same unobserved confounders that affect treatment also affect future values of the treatment. Future treatments thus proxy for the unmeasured confounder, and researchers can exploit these proxy measures productively. We establish several new results: Regarding a commonly assumed data-generating process involving future treatments, we (1) introduce a simple new approach to reduce bias and show that it strictly reduces bias; (2) elaborate on existing approaches and show that they can increase bias; (3) assess the relative merits of approaches; (4) analyze true state dependence and selection as key challenges; and (5) demonstrate that future treatments can test for hidden bias, even when they fail to reduce bias. We illustrate these results empirically with an analysis of the effect of parental income on children’s educational attainment.
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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PSID
Geographic Coverage:
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United States
Time Period(s):
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1968 – 1992
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