We discuss the state-of-the-art in the application of quasi-experimental methods to estimate the impact of nutrition policies based on observational data. This field of application is less mature compared to other settings, especially labour and health policy, as food economists have started to implement widely counterfactual methods only over the last decade. We review the underlying assumptions behind the most prominent methods, when they can be regarded as credible and if/when they can be tested. We especially focus on the problem of dealing with unobserved confounding factors, emphasizing recent evidence on the limitations of propensity score methods, and the hard task of convincing reviewers about the quality of instrumental va...
Concerns about the growing prevalence of obesity worldwide have led researchers and policy makers to...
here is much talk about the need for policies to be evidence-based; an admirable objective but not e...
The identification of the causal effects of educational policies is the top priority in recent educa...
We discuss the state-of-the-art in the application of quasi-experimental methods to estimate the im...
International audienceThis paper aims at observational causal modelling, investigating the causal re...
The analysis of the effects of a policy and the factors that mediated those effects are among the co...
The goal of this paper is to provide insights into how scientific evidence can be used for policymak...
This paper defends the use of quasi-experiments for causal estimation in economics against the wides...
Observational research, mainly prospective cohort studies (PCS), has represented a long-standing cha...
Published: August 4, 2017Background: This systematic review (PROSPERO: CRD42015025276) employs a rea...
There is mixed evidence of the effectiveness of interventions operating on a large scale. Although t...
Abstract: Ethical concerns aside, there is nothing inherently wrong with using randomized control tr...
A large literature on causal inference in statistics, econometrics, biostatistics, and epidemiology ...
Abstract Background Food tax-subsidy policies are ...
Angrist and Pischke highlight one aspect of the research that has positively transformed econometric...
Concerns about the growing prevalence of obesity worldwide have led researchers and policy makers to...
here is much talk about the need for policies to be evidence-based; an admirable objective but not e...
The identification of the causal effects of educational policies is the top priority in recent educa...
We discuss the state-of-the-art in the application of quasi-experimental methods to estimate the im...
International audienceThis paper aims at observational causal modelling, investigating the causal re...
The analysis of the effects of a policy and the factors that mediated those effects are among the co...
The goal of this paper is to provide insights into how scientific evidence can be used for policymak...
This paper defends the use of quasi-experiments for causal estimation in economics against the wides...
Observational research, mainly prospective cohort studies (PCS), has represented a long-standing cha...
Published: August 4, 2017Background: This systematic review (PROSPERO: CRD42015025276) employs a rea...
There is mixed evidence of the effectiveness of interventions operating on a large scale. Although t...
Abstract: Ethical concerns aside, there is nothing inherently wrong with using randomized control tr...
A large literature on causal inference in statistics, econometrics, biostatistics, and epidemiology ...
Abstract Background Food tax-subsidy policies are ...
Angrist and Pischke highlight one aspect of the research that has positively transformed econometric...
Concerns about the growing prevalence of obesity worldwide have led researchers and policy makers to...
here is much talk about the need for policies to be evidence-based; an admirable objective but not e...
The identification of the causal effects of educational policies is the top priority in recent educa...