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A Flexible, Heterogeneous Treatment Effects Difference-in-Differences Estimator for Repeated Cross-Sections

Author

Listed:
  • Partha Deb
  • Edward C. Norton
  • Jeffrey M. Wooldridge
  • Jeffrey E. Zabel

Abstract

This paper proposes a method to estimate treatment effects in difference-in-differences designs for repeated cross-section data in which the treatment start is staggered over time and treatment effects are heterogeneous by group, time, and observation-level covariates. We show that a linear-in-parameters regression specification with a sufficiently flexible functional form consisting of group-by-time treatment effects, two-way fixed effects, and interaction terms yields consistent estimates of heterogeneous treatment effects under general conditions. We also show that our method is identical to an imputation estimator. Under homoskedasticity assumptions the estimators are efficient, and aggregation of the treatment effects and inference are straightforward. We illustrate the use of this flexible linear model estimated by OLS with covariates (X) – FLEX – with an empirical example and provide comparisons to some benchmark estimators.

Suggested Citation

  • Partha Deb & Edward C. Norton & Jeffrey M. Wooldridge & Jeffrey E. Zabel, 2024. "A Flexible, Heterogeneous Treatment Effects Difference-in-Differences Estimator for Repeated Cross-Sections," NBER Working Papers 33026, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
  • Handle: RePEc:nbr:nberwo:33026
    Note: AG EH TWP
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    Cited by:

    1. Sunny R. Karim & Morten {O}rregaard Nielsen & James G. MacKinnon & Matthew D. Webb, 2026. "Improved Inference for CSDID Using the Cluster Jackknife," Papers 2602.12043, arXiv.org.
    2. Carsten Andersen & Timo Hener, 2026. "How Wind Turbines Affect Communities: Evidence on Health, Productivity, and Residential Sorting," ifo Working Paper Series 423, ifo Institute - Leibniz Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich.
    3. Jeffrey M. Wooldridge, 2025. "Two-way fixed effects, the two-way mundlak regression, and difference-in-differences estimators," Empirical Economics, Springer, vol. 69(5), pages 2545-2587, November.

    More about this item

    JEL classification:

    • C01 - Mathematical and Quantitative Methods - - General - - - Econometrics
    • C21 - Mathematical and Quantitative Methods - - Single Equation Models; Single Variables - - - Cross-Sectional Models; Spatial Models; Treatment Effect Models
    • C50 - Mathematical and Quantitative Methods - - Econometric Modeling - - - General

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