Significant Placebo Results in Difference-in-Differences Analysis: The Case of the ACA’s Parental Mandate

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Issue Date
2015-11-09Author
Slusky, David
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, author accepted manuscript
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Show full item recordAbstract
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) lets young adults stay on their parents’ insurance. Several papers use age–time difference-in-differences strategies to argue this causes health insurance and labor effects. I show that difference-in-differences over “placebo” dates also produces statistically significant “effects” before ACA implementation, even with conservative adjustments. This suggests the effects attributed to the ACA could instead reflect dynamics in the age-structure of the health insurance and labor markets. Reducing the age bandwidth yields more reliable estimates of the increases in parental and overall insurance coverage. The key problem in this literature is therefore potentially overstating the ACA’s “effects” in other dimensions.
Description
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Eastern Economic Journal. The definitive publisher-authenticated version is available online at: DOI:10.1057/eej.2015.49
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Citation
Slusky, David. 2016. "Significant Placebo Results in Difference-in-Differences Analysis: The Case of the ACA’s Parental Mandate." Eastern Economic Journal , (9 November 2015). doi:10.1057/eej.2015.49
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