4.5 Article

Inference in High-Dimensional Panel Models With an Application to Gun Control

Journal

JOURNAL OF BUSINESS & ECONOMIC STATISTICS
Volume 34, Issue 4, Pages 590-605

Publisher

AMER STATISTICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1080/07350015.2015.1102733

Keywords

Clustered standard errors; Fixed effects; High-dimensional-sparse regression; Inference under imperfect model selection; Instrumental variables; Panel data; Partially linear model; Uniformly valid inference after model selection

Funding

  1. ETH Postdoctoral Fellowship
  2. NSF
  3. ESRC [ES/M010147/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  4. Economic and Social Research Council [ES/M010147/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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We consider estimation and inference in panel data models with additive unobserved individual specific heterogeneity in a high-dimensional setting. The setting allows the number of time-varying regressors to be larger than the sample size. To make informative estimation and inference feasible, we require that the overall contribution of the time-varying variables after eliminating the individual specific heterogeneity can be captured by a relatively small number of the available variables whose identities are unknown. This restriction allows the problem-of estimation to proceed as a variable selection problem. Importantly, we treat the individual specific heterogeneity as fixed effects which allows this heterogeneity to be related to the observed time-varying variables in an unspecified way and allows that this heterogeneity may differ for all individuals. Within this framework, we provide procedures that give uniformly valid inference over a fixed subset of parameters in the canonical linear fixed effects model and over coefficients on a fixed vector of endogenous variables in panel data instrumental variable models with fixed effects and many instruments. We present simulation results in support of the theoretical developments and illustrate the use of the methods in an application aimed at estimating the effect of gun prevalence on crime rates.

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