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On the Assumptions of Synthetic Control Methods

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  • Claudia Shi
  • Dhanya Sridhar
  • Vishal Misra
  • David M. Blei

Abstract

Synthetic control (SC) methods have been widely applied to estimate the causal effect of large-scale interventions, e.g., the state-wide effect of a change in policy. The idea of synthetic controls is to approximate one unit's counterfactual outcomes using a weighted combination of some other units' observed outcomes. The motivating question of this paper is: how does the SC strategy lead to valid causal inferences? We address this question by re-formulating the causal inference problem targeted by SC with a more fine-grained model, where we change the unit of the analysis from "large units" (e.g., states) to "small units" (e.g., individuals in states). Under this re-formulation, we derive sufficient conditions for the non-parametric causal identification of the causal effect. We highlight two implications of the reformulation: (1) it clarifies where "linearity" comes from, and how it falls naturally out of the more fine-grained and flexible model, and (2) it suggests new ways of using available data with SC methods for valid causal inference, in particular, new ways of selecting observations from which to estimate the counterfactual.

Suggested Citation

  • Claudia Shi & Dhanya Sridhar & Vishal Misra & David M. Blei, 2021. "On the Assumptions of Synthetic Control Methods," Papers 2112.05671, arXiv.org, revised Dec 2021.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2112.05671
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    11. Ferman, Bruno & Pinto, Cristine, 2017. "Placebo Tests for Synthetic Controls," MPRA Paper 78079, University Library of Munich, Germany.
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    2. Yiping Lu & Jiajin Li & Lexing Ying & Jose Blanchet, 2022. "Synthetic Principal Component Design: Fast Covariate Balancing with Synthetic Controls," Papers 2211.15241, arXiv.org.

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