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Causal Duration Analysis with Diff-in-Diff

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  • Ben Deaner
  • Hyejin Ku

Abstract

In economic program evaluation, it is common to obtain panel data in which outcomes are indicators that an individual has reached an absorbing state. For example, they may indicate whether an individual has exited a period of unemployment, passed an exam, left a marriage, or had their parole revoked. The parallel trends assumption that underpins difference-in-differences generally fails in such settings. We suggest identifying conditions that are analogous to those of difference-in-differences but apply to hazard rates rather than mean outcomes. These alternative assumptions motivate estimators that retain the simplicity and transparency of standard diff-in-diff, and we suggest analogous specification tests. Our approach can be adapted to general linear restrictions between the hazard rates of different groups, motivating duration analogues of the triple differences and synthetic control methods. We apply our procedures to examine the impact of a policy that increased the generosity of unemployment benefits, using a cross-cohort comparison.

Suggested Citation

  • Ben Deaner & Hyejin Ku, 2024. "Causal Duration Analysis with Diff-in-Diff," Papers 2405.05220, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2405.05220
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