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Treatment effects at the margin: Everyone is marginal

Published: August 29, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2508.21583v1

By: Haotian Deng

Potential Business Impact:

Finds true job help effects, not just who got hired.

Business Areas:
A/B Testing Data and Analytics

This paper develops a framework for identifying treatment effects when a policy simultaneously alters both the incentive to participate and the outcome of interest -- such as hiring decisions and wages in response to employment subsidies; or working decisions and wages in response to job trainings. This framework was inspired by my PhD project on a Belgian reform that subsidised first-time hiring, inducing entry by marginal firms yet meanwhile changing the wages they pay. Standard methods addressing selection-into-treatment concepts (like Heckman selection equations and local average treatment effects), or before-after comparisons (including simple DiD or RDD), cannot isolate effects at this shifting margin where treatment defines who is observed. I introduce marginality-weighted estimands that recover causal effects among policy-induced entrants, offering a policy-relevant alternative in settings with endogenous selection. This method can thus be applied widely to understanding the economic impacts of public programmes, especially in fields largely relying on reduced-form causal inference estimation (e.g. labour economics, development economics, health economics).

Country of Origin
🇧🇪 Belgium

Page Count
13 pages

Category
Economics:
Econometrics