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This study introduces a new economic approach to analyze social experiments with flawed randomization. It offers hypothesis tests for compromised designs, re-evaluating the Perry Preschool Project

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Area of Science:

  • Econometrics
  • Social Experimentation
  • Statistical Inference

Background:

  • Social experiments often face challenges with imperfect randomization protocols.
  • Administrative constraints can lead experimenters to "satisfice" in achieving covariate balance.
  • Partially documented or re-randomization designs complicate accurate analysis.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To present a decision-theoretic economic framework for analyzing social experiments with compromised random assignment.
  • To develop robust hypothesis testing methods for small samples under imperfect randomization.
  • To re-examine the effectiveness of interventions like the Perry Preschool Project using a novel analytical approach.

Main Methods:

  • A decision-theoretic economic model is employed to analyze flawed experimental designs.
  • Design-based small-sample hypothesis tests are developed using worst-case randomization null distributions.
  • The methodology is applied to re-evaluate estimates from the Perry Preschool Project.

Main Results:

  • The proposed approach accommodates various compromised experimental designs, including imperfectly documented re-randomization.
  • Worst-case null distributions provide a conservative basis for hypothesis testing in flawed experiments.
  • Re-analysis of the Perry Preschool Project highlights the critical impact of modeling reassignment on effectiveness estimates.

Conclusions:

  • A flexible and robust economic framework can effectively analyze social experiments with compromised randomization.
  • The choice of modeling reassignment significantly influences the conclusions drawn about program effectiveness.
  • This approach offers valuable tools for researchers dealing with imperfectly executed social experiments.