- Falsification/placebo tests.
- The Mundlak regression: recover coefficients on time-fixed variables, test for CRE, and get the within estimates on time-varying regressors.
- Simulation before estimation: Make sure your empirical method actually get the right answers when you generate your own data--and hence know the correct answers. (I credit this idea to Sam Kortum who advocated it at a talk he gave at the 2007 EIIT.)
- Graphical display of regression coefficients (especially for letting the variable of interest enter without parametric restrictions on functional form). A helpful referee suggested this.
- "Strict exogeneity tests" Do leads enter significantly? They shouldn't if effects are causal.
- Use the linear probability model. It gives marginal effects directly and it doesn't have the Ai/Norton problem for interactions in logit & probit models.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
6 things worth knowing about in empirical economics
In the last couple years, I've learned a few new tricks (which, as an increasingly "old dog," makes me feel good):
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