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Regression Discontinuity in Policy Evaluation×Évaluation de politiques publiques : Différence de différences×
DomainePublic PolicyInférence causale
FamilleRegression modelRegression model
Année d'origine19601978-2009
Auteur d'origineDonald Thistlethwaite & Donald Campbell (design); Imbens, Lemieux, Lee (modern practice)Ashenfelter (1978); Heckman, LaLonde & Smith (1999); Imbens & Wooldridge (2009)
TypeQuasi-experimental causal design for threshold-assigned policiesQuasi-experimental / policy evaluation
Source fondatriceThistlethwaite, D. L., & Campbell, D. T. (1960). Regression-discontinuity analysis: An alternative to the ex post facto experiment. Journal of Educational Psychology, 51(6), 309–317. DOI ↗Imbens, G. W., & Wooldridge, J. M. (2009). Recent Developments in the Econometrics of Program Evaluation. Journal of Economic Literature, 47(1), 5-86. DOI ↗
AliasPolicy RD Design, Threshold-Based Policy Evaluation, Cutoff Rule Evaluation, Eligibility-Threshold Designpolicy DiD, program evaluation DiD, policy impact DiD, DiD policy assessment
Apparentées34
RésuméRegression discontinuity (RD) is a quasi-experimental design for estimating the causal effect of a policy that is assigned by a sharp threshold on some continuous eligibility score — an income line for a benefit, a test score for a scholarship, a vote share for winning office, a population cutoff that triggers a regulation. Units falling just below and just above the cutoff are nearly identical except for their treatment status, so comparing their outcomes isolates the policy's effect at the threshold. First used by Thistlethwaite and Campbell in 1960 and revived as a workhorse of policy evaluation by economists in the 2000s, RD is widely regarded as the quasi-experimental design with the strongest claim to internal validity.Policy Evaluation DiD applies the difference-in-differences estimator specifically to assess the causal impact of government programs, regulations, or policy reforms. It compares outcome changes in a group exposed to the policy against a comparable untreated group, before and after the policy took effect, isolating the net policy effect from pre-existing trends and time-common shocks.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Regression Discontinuity in Policy Evaluation · Policy Evaluation Difference-in-Differences. Consulté le 2026-06-24 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare