This paper investigates Monotone Instrumental Variables (MIV) and their ability to aid in identifying treatment effects when the treatment is binary in a nonparametric bounding framework. I show that an MIV can only aid in identification beyond that of a Monotone Treatment Selection assumption if for some region of the instrument the observed conditional-on-received-treatment outcomes exhibit monotonicity in the instrument in the opposite direction as that assumed by the MIV in a Simpson's Paradox-like fashion. Furthermore, an MIV can only aid in identification beyond that of a Monotone Treatment Response assumption if for some region of the instrument either the above Simpson's Paradox-like relationship exists or the instrument's indirect ...
This paper provides a review of methodological advancements in the evaluation of heterogeneous treat...
Background Instrumental variable (IV) methods are often used to identify ‘local’ causal effects in ...
The credibility of standard instrumental variables assumptions is often under dispute. This paper im...
This paper investigates Monotone Instrumental Variables (MIV) and their ability to aid in identifyin...
Econometric analyses of treatment response commonly use instrumental variable (IV) assumptions to id...
Manski (Monotone treatment response. Econometrica 1997;65:1311–34) and Manski and Pepper (Monotone i...
Econometric analyses of treatment response commonly use instrumental variable (IV) assumptions to id...
This paper extends the identification results in Nevo and Rosen(2012) to nonparametric models. We de...
Instrumental variables (IVs) are commonly used to estimate the effects of some treatments. A valid I...
The instrumental variable method relies on a strong "no-defiers" condition, which requires that the...
This note provides a simple exposition of what IV can and cannot estimate in a model with a binary t...
In the presence of an endogenous binary treatment and a valid binary instru- ment, causal effects a...
When estimating local average and marginal treatment effects using instrumental variables (IV), mul...
Multivalued treatment models have only been studied so far under restrictive assumptions: ordered ch...
"Imbens and Angrist (1994) were the first to exploit a monotonicity condition in order to identify a...
This paper provides a review of methodological advancements in the evaluation of heterogeneous treat...
Background Instrumental variable (IV) methods are often used to identify ‘local’ causal effects in ...
The credibility of standard instrumental variables assumptions is often under dispute. This paper im...
This paper investigates Monotone Instrumental Variables (MIV) and their ability to aid in identifyin...
Econometric analyses of treatment response commonly use instrumental variable (IV) assumptions to id...
Manski (Monotone treatment response. Econometrica 1997;65:1311–34) and Manski and Pepper (Monotone i...
Econometric analyses of treatment response commonly use instrumental variable (IV) assumptions to id...
This paper extends the identification results in Nevo and Rosen(2012) to nonparametric models. We de...
Instrumental variables (IVs) are commonly used to estimate the effects of some treatments. A valid I...
The instrumental variable method relies on a strong "no-defiers" condition, which requires that the...
This note provides a simple exposition of what IV can and cannot estimate in a model with a binary t...
In the presence of an endogenous binary treatment and a valid binary instru- ment, causal effects a...
When estimating local average and marginal treatment effects using instrumental variables (IV), mul...
Multivalued treatment models have only been studied so far under restrictive assumptions: ordered ch...
"Imbens and Angrist (1994) were the first to exploit a monotonicity condition in order to identify a...
This paper provides a review of methodological advancements in the evaluation of heterogeneous treat...
Background Instrumental variable (IV) methods are often used to identify ‘local’ causal effects in ...
The credibility of standard instrumental variables assumptions is often under dispute. This paper im...