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Equality-Minded Treatment Choice

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posted on 2021-09-29, 15:53 authored by Toru Kitagawa, Aleksey Tetenov

The goal of many randomized experiments and quasi-experimental studies in economics is to inform policies that aim to raise incomes and reduce economic inequality. A policy maximizing the sum of individual incomes may not be desirable if it magnifies economic inequality and post-treatment redistribution of income is infeasible. This article develops a method to estimate the optimal treatment assignment policy based on observable individual covariates when the policy objective is to maximize an equality-minded rank-dependent social welfare function, which puts higher weight on individuals with lower-ranked outcomes. We estimate the optimal policy by maximizing a sample analog of the rank-dependent welfare over a properly constrained set of policies. We show that the average social welfare attained by our estimated policy converges to the maximal attainable welfare at n1/2 rate uniformly over a large class of data distributions when the propensity score is known. We also show that this rate is minimax optimal. We provide an application of our method using the data from the National JTPA Study.

Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

Funding

Financial support from the ESRC through the ESRC Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (CeMMAP) (grant number RES-589-28-0001) and the European Research Council (Starting grant number 715940) is gratefully acknowledged. Toru Kitagawa thanks the Visiting Researcher Fellowship from Collegio Carlo Alberto.

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