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  • When Should You Adjust Standard Errors for Clustering? (new paper)

    A new paper of potential interest to many users: "When Should You Adjust Standard Errors for Clustering?", by A. Abadie, S. Athey, G. Imbens, and J. Wooldridge, NBER Working Paper No. 24003, November 2017, http://www.nber.org/papers/w24003
    Abstract
    In empirical work in economics it is common to report standard errors that account for clustering of units. Typically, the motivation given for the clustering adjustments is that unobserved components in outcomes for units within clusters are correlated. However, because correlation may occur across more than one dimension, this motivation makes it difficult to justify why researchers use clustering in some dimensions, such as geographic, but not others, such as age cohorts or gender. This motivation also makes it difficult to explain why one should not cluster with data from a randomized experiment. In this paper, we argue that clustering is in essence a design problem, either a sampling design or an experimental design issue. It is a sampling design issue if sampling follows a two stage process where in the first stage, a subset of clusters were sampled randomly from a population of clusters, and in the second stage, units were sampled randomly from the sampled clusters. In this case the clustering adjustment is justified by the fact that there are clusters in the population that we do not see in the sample. Clustering is an experimental design issue if the assignment is correlated within the clusters. We take the view that this second perspective best fits the typical setting in economics where clustering adjustments are used. This perspective allows us to shed new light on three questions: (i) when should one adjust the standard errors for clustering, (ii) when is the conventional adjustment for clustering appropriate, and (iii) when does the conventional adjustment of the standard errors matter.

  • #2
    Stephen,

    thank you for this

    for those of us not familiar with NBER, are "working papers" to be considered "in process" (with expectation of journal publication) or "final"?

    Rich

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    • #3
      A really interesting matter and approach. Thanks!
      Best regards,

      Marcos

      Comment


      • #4
        Rich: economists very commonly release versions of their research papers in working paper series, quite often because publication lags can be very long. Also some series have very high circulation lists -- publicity is good! (The NBER series is one of the leading series in the USA.) Much of the time, the version of the paper released in this manner is the version that is then submitted to a journal. In general, economics journals do not mind submitters releasing versions in this way even once the paper is published (unlike in some other disciplines, I understand).
        All that's a long-winded way of saying "yes" to both your questions! NBER working papers are commonly cited in their working paper form (because of the long lags to publication).

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        • #5
          Thanks professor @Stephen Jenkins for sharing this.

          Comment


          • #6
            Stephen,

            thank you! <grin>

            Best,
            Rich

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