Dear all,
I am trying to understand the “Years” row in Table 1 of Nagengast, Rios-Avila, and Yotov (2025).
Their sample period is 1980–2016, but in their main table Table 1 they report 34 years, not 37. So 3 years are missing.
When I replicate their estimation method (same dataset, different treatment variable), the last three years (2014–2016) drop out entirely from my analysis.
Initially, I thought this was because, in the ETWFE setup, the last few years after treatment for the latest cohorts might have no untreated observations left to serve as controls. But I checked my data and also there data, and there are still untreated dyads in those years. So that explanation does not seem to apply.
In my Stata output, all treatment-cohort × year interactions involving those last 3 years are shown as (empty) and the years themselves are not counted in the Years row of the summary table.
My questions:
For reference:
Thank you for any clarification!
Zhixiao Yao

I am trying to understand the “Years” row in Table 1 of Nagengast, Rios-Avila, and Yotov (2025).
Their sample period is 1980–2016, but in their main table Table 1 they report 34 years, not 37. So 3 years are missing.
When I replicate their estimation method (same dataset, different treatment variable), the last three years (2014–2016) drop out entirely from my analysis.
Initially, I thought this was because, in the ETWFE setup, the last few years after treatment for the latest cohorts might have no untreated observations left to serve as controls. But I checked my data and also there data, and there are still untreated dyads in those years. So that explanation does not seem to apply.
In my Stata output, all treatment-cohort × year interactions involving those last 3 years are shown as (empty) and the years themselves are not counted in the Years row of the summary table.
My questions:
- Why would these years drop out if untreated observations are still present?
- Is there something in the ETWFE/jwdid estimation routine (or the way the event-time dummies are constructed) that would cause the last few years to be omitted even when controls exist?
For reference:
- Screenshot from Table 1 of Nagengast et al. showing “Years = 34” (1980–2016 sample).
- Screenshot from my own ETWFE regression output showing (empty) for all interactions involving 2014–2016.
Thank you for any clarification!
Zhixiao Yao
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