Imputation of Counterfactual Outcomes when the Errors are Predictable
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Cites work
- An Exact and Robust Conformal Inference Method for Counterfactual and Synthetic Controls
- Application of Least Squares Regression to Relationships Containing Auto- Correlated Error Terms
- ArCo: an artificial counterfactual approach for high-dimensional panel time-series data
- Best Linear Unbiased Prediction in the Generalized Linear Regression Model
- Confidence intervals of treatment effects in panel data models with interactive fixed effects
- Constructing high frequency economic indicators by imputation
- Counterfactual Analysis With Artificial Controls: Inference, High Dimensions, and Nonstationarity
- Counterfactual Analysis and Inference With Nonstationary Data
- Do We Exploit all Information for Counterfactual Analysis? Benefits of Factor Models and Idiosyncratic Correction
- Inferring causal impact using Bayesian structural time-series models
- Matrix Completion Methods for Causal Panel Data Models
- Matrix Completion, Counterfactuals, and Factor Analysis of Missing Data
- Prediction Intervals for Synthetic Control Methods
- Prediction in the context of the variance-components model
- Properties of Predictors in Misspecified Autoregressive Time Series Models
- Statistical analysis with missing data
- Statistical inference for average treatment effects estimated by synthetic control methods
- Synthetic controls with imperfect pretreatment fit
- That BLUP is a good thing: The estimation of random effects. With comments and a rejoinder by the author
- The Augmented Synthetic Control Method
- The sampling distribution of forecasts from a first-order autoregression
Cited in
(4)- Discussion of “Imputation of Counterfactual Outcomes when the Errors are Predictable” by Sílvia Gonçalves and Serena Ng
- On “Imputation of Counterfactual Outcomes When the Errors Are Predictable”: Viewing the PUP as the DID and the LDV
- Counterfactual Imputation: Comments on “Imputation of Counterfactual Outcomes when the Errors are Predictable” by Silvia Gonçalves and Serena Ng
- On “Imputation of Counterfactual Outcomes when the Errors are Predictable”: Discussions on Misspecification and Suggestions of Sensitivity Analyses
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