Hello all,
I was hoping to get some help on an econometric question regarding difference in difference regression. I am studying a maternity leave policy from 2018 that increased the wage replacement rate, however it was amended in 2020 to increase leave duration by 2 weeks as well. I tried using only data from 2015-2019, but there are too few observations to draw any significant results. Is it possible to conduct the DID analysis using years 2015-2024 as long as I control for the "second treatment" in 2020 ? Is it as simple as controlling for year fixed effects using i.year (which I already included in my regression) ?
EDIT: my treatment group is mothers of infants in California and my two main control groups are mothers of older children in CA and mothers of infants in 3 states that do not have paid maternity leave.
I can't seem to find much literature on DID with policy changes during the post-period (I also don't know what this type of DID variation would be called) and I am not exactly sure how to go about doing it. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
I was hoping to get some help on an econometric question regarding difference in difference regression. I am studying a maternity leave policy from 2018 that increased the wage replacement rate, however it was amended in 2020 to increase leave duration by 2 weeks as well. I tried using only data from 2015-2019, but there are too few observations to draw any significant results. Is it possible to conduct the DID analysis using years 2015-2024 as long as I control for the "second treatment" in 2020 ? Is it as simple as controlling for year fixed effects using i.year (which I already included in my regression) ?
EDIT: my treatment group is mothers of infants in California and my two main control groups are mothers of older children in CA and mothers of infants in 3 states that do not have paid maternity leave.
I can't seem to find much literature on DID with policy changes during the post-period (I also don't know what this type of DID variation would be called) and I am not exactly sure how to go about doing it. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
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