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Nonparametric Regression with Selectively Missing Covariates

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Academic paper
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Academic Paper attributes

arXiv ID
1810.004110
arXiv Classification
Economics
Economics
0
Publication URL
arxiv.org/pdf/1810.0...11.pdf0
Publisher
ArXiv
ArXiv
0
DOI
doi.org/10.48550/ar...10.004110
Paid/Free
Free0
Academic Discipline
Econometrics
Econometrics
0
Economics
Economics
0
Submission Date
December 3, 2019
0
September 8, 2020
0
October 13, 2020
0
September 30, 2018
0
Author Names
Peter Haan0
Christoph Breunig0
Paper abstract

We consider the problem of regression with selectively observed covariates in a nonparametric framework. Our approach relies on instrumental variables that explain variation in the latent covariates but have no direct effect on selection. The regression function of interest is shown to be a weighted version of observed conditional expectation where the weighting function is a fraction of selection probabilities. Nonparametric identification of the fractional probability weight (FPW) function is achieved via a partial completeness assumption. We provide primitive functional form assumptions for partial completeness to hold. The identification result is constructive for the FPW series estimator. We derive the rate of convergence and also the pointwise asymptotic distribution. In both cases, the asymptotic performance of the FPW series estimator does not suffer from the inverse problem which derives from the nonparametric instrumental variable approach. In a Monte Carlo study, we analyze the finite sample properties of our estimator and we compare our approach to inverse probability weighting, which can be used alternatively for unconditional moment estimation. In the empirical application, we focus on two different applications. We estimate the association between income and health using linked data from the SHARE survey and administrative pension information and use pension entitlements as an instrument. In the second application we revisit the question how income affects the demand for housing based on data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP). In this application we use regional income information on the residential block level as an instrument. In both applications we show that income is selectively missing and we demonstrate that standard methods that do not account for the nonrandom selection process lead to significantly biased estimates for individuals with low income.

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