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Normalizations and misspecification in skill formation models

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  • Joachim Freyberger

Abstract

An important class of structural models studies the determinants of skill formation and the optimal timing of interventions. In this paper, I provide new identification results for these models and investigate the effects of seemingly innocuous scale and location restrictions on parameters of interest. To do so, I first characterize the identified set of all parameters without these additional restrictions and show that important policy-relevant parameters are point identified under weaker assumptions than commonly used in the literature. The implications of imposing standard scale and location restrictions depend on how the model is specified, but they generally impact the interpretation of parameters and can affect counterfactuals. Importantly, with the popular CES production function, commonly used scale restrictions are overidentifying and lead to biased estimators. Consequently, simply changing the units of measurements of observed variables might yield ineffective investment strategies and misleading policy recommendations. I show how existing estimators can easily be adapted to solve these issues. As a byproduct, this paper also presents a general and formal definition of when restrictions are truly normalizations.

Suggested Citation

  • Joachim Freyberger, 2021. "Normalizations and misspecification in skill formation models," Papers 2104.00473, arXiv.org, revised Jul 2022.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2104.00473
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    2. James J. Heckman & Jin Zhou, 2022. "Measuring Knowledge and Learning," NBER Working Papers 29990, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.

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