640 Project
Authors: Yicheng Shen, Yanjiao Yang, Huiying Lin
Do fixed/random effects account for unmeasured confounding?
A common saying in econometrics is that fixed/random effects in analyzing panel data absorb unmeasured confounding. In other words, with repeated measurements of the same unit, a model with unit-specific fixed/random effect can bypass unmeasured confounding. Some discussion can be found in Angrist and Pischke (2009, Mostly Harmless Econometrics, Chapter 5). A recent bold example is Dee et al. (2023, Nature Communications). But this claim is a mystery, why and in what sense? Hazlett and Wainstein (2020, Political Analysis) has some useful discussion.
$$ \begin{align*} E\left(\mathrm{Y}{i t} \mid A_i, \mathrm{X}{i t}, t, \mathrm{D}{i t}\right)& =\alpha+\lambda_t+\rho \mathrm{D}{i t}+A_i^{\prime} \gamma+\mathrm{X}{i t} \delta \ Y{it} &= \alpha_i+\lambda_t+\rho \mathrm{D}{i t}+A_i^{\prime} \gamma+\mathrm{X}{i t} \delta + \epsilon_{it} \end{align*} $$