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  • teffects

    Hi all,

    When using teffects psmatch, for example, how is the reported p-value calculated? Is it based upon a standard test or derived from the t-statistic? I can't find the answer in the documentation anywhere.

    Thanks,

    Rob.

  • #2
    The Examples in the "Remarks and examples" section of Manual entry for teffects psmatch label the test statistic "z", which means the test is a z-statistic, consisting of an approximately Normal numerator statistic divided by a denominator standard error and referred to a standard Normal distribution (mean zero, variance 1) for calculation of p-values.
    Steve Samuels
    Statistical Consulting
    [email protected]

    Stata 14.2

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    • #3
      Hi Steven,

      Thank you for clarifying this for me.

      Thanks,

      Rob.

      Comment


      • #4
        Hi All,

        Does anyone know if the standard error used to calculate this z-statistic (in Stata 15) take account of the matched nature of the samples?

        Thanks for any help you can provide with this...John

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        • #5
          Hi John,

          Estimation of standard errors in teffects psmatch take into account that the propensity score is estimated. The implementation follows the derivations from Abadie & Imbens (2012). The aspect of having matched sets is not relevant in this context. For further details about implemented methods, please have a look at Stata's [TE] Treatment Effects manual .

          Joerg


          Reference:

          Abadie, A., and G. W. Imbens. 2012. Matching on the estimated propensity score. Harvard University and National Bureau of Economic
          Research. http://www.nber.org/papers/w15301.

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          • #6
            Many thanks, Joerg! John.

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