Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-2004
Publication Title
Journal of Labor Economics
Department
Department of Economics
Abstract
In empirical research it is common practice to use sensible rules of thumb for cleaning data. Measurement error is often the justification for removing (trimming) or recoding (winsorizing) observations whose values lie outside a specified range. We consider a general measurement error process that nests many pl ausible models. Analytic results demonstrate that winsorizing and trimming are only solutions for a narrow class of measurement error processes. Indeed, for the measurement error processes found in most social-science data, such procedures can induce or exacerbate bias, and even inflate the variance estimates. We term this source of bias “Iatrogenic” (or econometrician induced) error. Monte Carlo simulations and empirical results from the Census PUMS data and 2001 CPS data demonstrate the fragility of trimming and winsorizing as solutions to measurement error in the dependent variable. Even on asymptotic variance and RMSE criteria, we are unable to find generalizable justifications for commonly used cleaning procedures.
DOI
10.1086/428028
Dartmouth Digital Commons Citation
Bollinger, Christopher R. and Chandra, Amitabh, "Iatrogenic Specification Error: A Cautionary Tale of Cleaning Data" (2004). Dartmouth Scholarship. 1781.
https://digitalcommons.dartmouth.edu/facoa/1781