External and Internal Validity of a Geographic Quasi-Experiment Embedded in a Cluster-Randomized Experiment
This chapter analyzes a geographic quasi-experiment embedded in a cluster-randomized experiment in Honduras. In the experiment, average treatment effects of conditional cash transfers on school enrollment and child labor were large – especially in the poorest experimental blocks – and could be generalized to a policy-relevant population given the original sample selection criteria. In contrast, the geographic quasi-experiment yielded point estimates that, for two of three dependent variables, were attenuated. A judicious policy analyst without access to the experimental results might have provided misleading advice based on the magnitude of point estimates. We assessed two main explanations for the difference in point estimates, related to external and internal validity.
Year of publication: |
2017
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Authors: | Galiani, Sebastián ; McEwan, Patrick J. ; Quistorff, Brian |
Published in: |
Regression Discontinuity Designs : Theory and Applications. - Bingley : Emerald Publishing, ISBN 978-1-78714-729-4. - 2017, p. 195-236
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Subject: | Theorie | Theory | Wirkungsanalyse | Impact assessment | Feldforschung | Field research | Honduras | Clusteranalyse | Cluster analysis | Kinderarbeit | Child labour | Schulbesuch | School attendance | Gemeinde | Municipality | Validierung | Validation | Experiment |
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