In Pursuit of Balance : Randomization in Practice in Development Field Experiments

Randomized experiments are increasingly used in development economics, with researchers now facing the question of not just whether to randomize, but how to do so. Pure random assignment guarantees that the treatment and control groups will have identical characteristics on average, but in any particular random allocation, the two groups will differ along some dimensions. Methods used to pursue greater balance include stratification, pair-wise matching, and re-randomization. This paper presents new evidence on the randomization methods used in existing randomized experiments, and carries out simulations in order to provide guidance for researchers. Three main results emerge. First, many researchers are not controlling for the method of randomization in their analysis. The authors show this leads to tests with incorrect size, and can result in lower power than if a pure random draw was used. Second, they find that in samples of 300 or more, the different randomization methods perform similarly in terms of achieving balance on many future outcomes of interest. However, for very persistent outcome variables and in smaller sample sizes, pair-wise matching and stratification perform best. Third, the analysis suggests that on balance the re-randomization methods common in practice are less desirable than other methods, such as matching.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bruhn, Miriam, McKenzie, David
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2008-10
Subjects:ALTERNATIVE APPROACH, BOOTSTRAP, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, ECONOMIC MODELS, ECONOMIC THEORY, ECONOMICS LITERATURE, ESTIMATORS, EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN, EXTERNALITIES, FIELD EXPERIMENTS, INCOME, LINEAR MODELS, LINEAR REGRESSION, LOTTERIES, METHODOLOGY, MINIMIZATION, MISSING OBSERVATIONS, NORMAL DISTRIBUTIONS, POLITICAL ECONOMY, PRECISION, PROBABILITY, PROGRAMS, RANDOMIZATION, RESEARCH PAPERS, RESEARCH REPORT, RESEARCH WORKING PAPERS, RESEARCHERS, RISK AVERSION, SAMPLE SIZE, SCENARIO, SCENARIOS, SCIENTISTS, SIGNIFICANCE LEVEL, SIMULATION, SIMULATIONS, STANDARD DEVIATIONS, STANDARD ERRORS, STATA, STATA CODE, STATISTICAL ANALYSIS, STATISTICAL METHODS, STATISTICAL SIGNIFICANCE, STATISTICAL TESTS, TECHNIQUES, VALIDITY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/10/9938284/pursuit-balance-randomization-practice-development-field-experiments
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/6910
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!