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Inference on Multiple Winners with Applications to Economic Mobility

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  • Andreas Petrou-Zeniou
  • Azeem M. Shaikh

Abstract

This paper considers the problem of inference on multiple winners. In our setting, a winner is defined abstractly as any population whose rank according to some random quantity, such as an estimated treatment effect, a measure of value-added, or benefit (net of cost), falls in a pre-specified range of values. As such, this framework generalizes the inference on a single winner setting previously considered in Andrews et al. (2023), in which a winner is understood to be the single population whose rank according to some random quantity is highest. We show that this richer setting accommodates a broad variety of empirically-relevant applications. We develop a two-step method for inference in the spirit of Romano et al. (2014), which we compare to existing methods or their natural generalizations to this setting. We first show the finite-sample validity of this method in a normal location model and then develop asymptotic counterparts to these results by proving uniform validity over a large class of distributions satisfying a weak uniform integrability condition. Importantly, our results permit degeneracy in the covariance matrix of the limiting distribution, which arises naturally in many applications. In an application to the literature on economic mobility, we find that it is difficult to distinguish between high and low mobility census tracts when correcting for selection. Finally, we demonstrate the practical relevance of our theoretical results through an extensive set of simulations.

Suggested Citation

  • Andreas Petrou-Zeniou & Azeem M. Shaikh, 2024. "Inference on Multiple Winners with Applications to Economic Mobility," Papers 2410.19212, arXiv.org, revised Aug 2025.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2410.19212
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Magne Mogstad & Joseph P Romano & Azeem M Shaikh & Daniel Wilhelm, 2024. "Inference for Ranks with Applications to Mobility across Neighbourhoods and Academic Achievement across Countries," The Review of Economic Studies, Review of Economic Studies Ltd, vol. 91(1), pages 476-518.
    2. Alessandro Tarozzi & Jaikishan Desai & Kristin Johnson, 2015. "The Impacts of Microcredit: Evidence from Ethiopia," American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, American Economic Association, vol. 7(1), pages 54-89, January.
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    4. Peter Bergman & Raj Chetty & Stefanie DeLuca & Nathaniel Hendren & Lawrence F. Katz & Christopher Palmer, 2024. "Creating Moves to Opportunity: Experimental Evidence on Barriers to Neighborhood Choice," American Economic Review, American Economic Association, vol. 114(5), pages 1281-1337, May.
    5. Joseph P. Romano & Azeem M. Shaikh & Michael Wolf, 2014. "A Practical Two‐Step Method for Testing Moment Inequalities," Econometrica, Econometric Society, vol. 82, pages 1979-2002, September.
    6. Britta Augsburg & Ralph De Haas & Heike Harmgart & Costas Meghir, 2015. "The Impacts of Microcredit: Evidence from Bosnia and Herzegovina," American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, American Economic Association, vol. 7(1), pages 183-203, January.
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