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Better Understanding Triple Differences Estimators

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  • Marcelo Ortiz-Villavicencio
  • Pedro H. C. Sant'Anna

Abstract

Triple Differences (DDD) designs are widely used in empirical work to relax parallel trends assumptions in Difference-in-Differences (DiD) settings. This paper shows that common DDD implementations -- such as taking the difference between two DiDs or applying three-way fixed effects regressions -- are generally invalid when identification requires conditioning on covariates. In staggered adoption settings, the common DiD practice of pooling all not-yet-treated units as a comparison group introduces additional bias, even when covariates are not required for identification. These insights challenge conventional empirical strategies and underscore the need for estimators tailored specifically to DDD structures. We develop regression adjustment, inverse probability weighting, and doubly robust estimators that remain valid under covariate-adjusted DDD parallel trends. For staggered designs, we show how to correctly leverage multiple comparison groups to get more informative inference. Simulations highlight substantial bias reductions and precision gains relative to standard approaches, offering a new framework for credible DDD estimation in empirical research.

Suggested Citation

  • Marcelo Ortiz-Villavicencio & Pedro H. C. Sant'Anna, 2025. "Better Understanding Triple Differences Estimators," Papers 2505.09942, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2505.09942
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/2505.09942
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    Cited by:

    1. Andrew Baker & Brantly Callaway & Scott Cunningham & Andrew Goodman-Bacon & Pedro H. C. Sant'Anna, 2025. "Difference-in-Differences Designs: A Practitioner's Guide," Papers 2503.13323, arXiv.org, revised Jun 2025.

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