May 2008
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Authors' Committee

Chair:

Andy Eggers (Gov)

Members:

Weihua An (Soc)
Kevin Bartz (Stats)
Sebastian Bauhoff (HealthPol)
John Graves (HealthPol)
Justin Grimmer (Gov)
Jens Hainmueller (Gov)
Mike Kellermann (Gov)
Ellie Powell (Gov)
Gary King (Gov)

Weekly Research Workshop Sponsors

Alberto Abadie, Lee Fleming, Adam Glynn, Guido Imbens, Gary King, Kevin Quinn, Jamie Robins, Don Rubin, Chris Winship

Recent Comments

Recent Entries

Categories

Blogroll

Brad DeLong
Cognitive Daily
Complexity & Social Networks
Developing Intelligence
EconLog
The Education Wonks
Empirical Legal Studies
Free Exchange
Freakonomics
Health Care Economist
Junk Charts
Language Log
Law & Econ Prof Blog
Machine Learning (Theory)
Marginal Revolution
Mixing Memory
Mystery Pollster
New Economist
Political Arithmetik
Political Science Methods
Pure Pedantry
Science & Law Blog
Simon Jackman
Social Science++
Statistical modeling, causal inference, and social science

Archives

Notification

Powered by
Movable Type 3.34


« "Harvard for Less" | Main | Bayesian Models of Human Learning and Reasoning: A Recap »

23 November 2005

AIDS And African Economies

Eric Werker (guest author)

I enjoyed the chance to present a work in progress that attempts to measure the impact of AIDS on the economies and populations in Africa at the Applied Statistics Workshop on Wednesday, November 9. Given the possibility for some omitted variable to influence both the national AIDS rate and economic performance or some other outcome variable, I chose to pursue an instrumental variable strategy using variations in the male circumcision rate (which the bulk of the medical literature on this subject believes to have a causal impact on the spread of HIV/AIDS). Comments from the audience were useful and illuminating, and the debate was most interesting around potential violations of the exclusion restriction as well as the use of 2SLS in a small sample setting.

(Blogger's note: For more on this talk, see here and here.)

Posted by James Greiner at November 23, 2005 5:47 AM

Comments

Notification

Enter e-mail address to receive notification of new comments to this entry

Post a comment




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)