1 / 15

Difference-in-differences: The Silver Crash of 1893 and Population Characteristics

Difference-in-differences: The Silver Crash of 1893 and Population Characteristics . Rey Hernández-Julián Department of Economics Metropolitan State College of Denver. Correlation ≠ Causation. Sometimes this is obvious: Birds flying south makes the weather to get colder

loyal
Download Presentation

Difference-in-differences: The Silver Crash of 1893 and Population Characteristics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Difference-in-differences: The Silver Crash of 1893 and Population Characteristics Rey Hernández-Julián Department of Economics Metropolitan State College of Denver

  2. Correlation ≠ Causation • Sometimes this is obvious: • Birds flying south makes the weather to get colder • The lack of pirates led to global warming • Sometimes not so obvious: • Does reducing class size cause an improvement in student test scores?

  3. How can we ever know? • Natural sciences serve as a model • How does exposure to a certain element affect the growth rate of a cell? • How do you test to see if a medical treatment has a positive effect on the patient’s outcomes? • Randomized Controlled Experiment

  4. Not so simple • It’s one thing to experiment with molecules, cells, animals, and even people in the medical sciences… • It’s another thing to experiment with an entire economy! • What is the effect of a recession on local population? • But It happens all the time! • Government policy • Randomness of reality • We call these natural experiments. • Our job: find a good one

  5. The Silver Crash of 1893 • Sherman Silver Purchase Act repealed. • Price of Silver fell from a high of $1.50/oz to $0.62/oz. • Colorado was a main Silver producer • 60% of nation’s total! • Some counties produced silver at higher rate than others • Natural experiment: recession randomly assigned to some counties and not to others!

  6. Research Questions • Q1: How does the fall in the price of the silver affect a county’s population growth from 1890-1900? • Q2: How does the fall in the price of silver affect a county’s male/female ratio between 1890-1900?

  7. Experimental Design • Find two counties, one produces a lot of silver, one does not. • The one that is silver intensive is the treatment town; it receives the treatment (local recession). • The one that doesn’t is the control town; it does not receive the treatment. • Assume that treatment is randomly assigned.

  8. Census1890 and 1900 • Douglas County • low level of silver production • Rhyolite • Ouray County • lots of mining, lots of silver • local economy seriously and directly impacted

  9. Difference-in-differences

  10. Q1: Population

  11. Q1: Population

  12. Q2: Percent Male

  13. Underlying Assumptions • If not for the Sliver Crash, the two towns are expected to have similar growth patterns. • The kind of people who settle in places like Ouray and Douglas have similar expectations and would respond similarly to a recession. • These towns are representative of the pattern. • This assumption can be eliminated by having a larger sample.

  14. Conclusions • Difference-in-differences uses data from a natural experiment to estimate the magnitude of a casual relationship. • Students can learn how to collect, organize, and analyze data even if the natural experiment isn’t perfect. • Students gain critical thinking skills from analyzing the assumptions of natural experiments.

More Related