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Distributional Effects of a Continuous Treatment with an Application on Intergenerational Mobility

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  • Brantly Callaway
  • Weige Huang

Abstract

This paper considers the effect of a continuous treatment on the entire distribution of outcomes after adjusting for differences in the distribution of covariates across different levels of the treatment. Our methodology encompasses dose‐response functions, counterfactual distributions, and ‘distributional policy effects’ depending on the assumptions invoked by the researcher. We propose a three‐step estimator that consists of (i) estimating the distribution of the outcome conditional on the treatment and other covariates using quantile regression; (ii) for each value of the treatment, averaging over a counterfactual distribution of the covariates holding the treatment fixed; (iii) converting the resulting counterfactual distribution into parameters of interest that are easy to interpret. We show that our estimators converge uniformly to Gaussian processes and that the empirical bootstrap can be used to conduct uniformly valid inference across a range of values of the treatment. We use our method to study intergenerational income mobility where we consider effects of parents’ income on features of their child's income distribution such as (i) the fraction of children with income below the poverty line; (ii) the variance of child's income; and (iii) the inter‐quantile range of child's income–all as a function of parents’ income.

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  • Brantly Callaway & Weige Huang, 2020. "Distributional Effects of a Continuous Treatment with an Application on Intergenerational Mobility," Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, Department of Economics, University of Oxford, vol. 82(4), pages 808-842, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:bla:obuest:v:82:y:2020:i:4:p:808-842
    DOI: 10.1111/obes.12355
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    2. Brantly Callaway & Weige Huang, 2019. "Local Intergenerational Elasticities," Economics Bulletin, AccessEcon, vol. 39(2), pages 919-928.
    3. Brantly Callaway & Tong Li & Irina Murtazashvili, 2021. "Nonlinear Approaches to Intergenerational Income Mobility allowing for Measurement Error," Papers 2107.09235, arXiv.org, revised Dec 2021.
    4. Douglas A. Webber, 2018. "Employment Adjustment Over the Business Cycle: The Impact of Competition in the Labor Market," DETU Working Papers 1806, Department of Economics, Temple University.
    5. Chunrong Ai & Yue Fang & Haitian Xie, 2024. "Data-driven Policy Learning for a Continuous Treatment," Papers 2402.02535, arXiv.org.

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