Sufficient Statistics for Welfare Analysis: A Bridge between Structural and Reduced-Form Methods
51 Pages Posted: 10 Oct 2008 Last revised: 6 Nov 2022
There are 3 versions of this paper
Sufficient Statistics for Welfare Analysis: A Bridge between Structural and Reduced-Form Methods
Sufficient Statistics for Welfare Analysis: A Bridge between Structural and Reduced-Form Methods
Date Written: October 2008
Abstract
The debate between "structural" and "reduced-form" approaches has generated substantial controversy in applied economics. This article reviews a recent literature in public economics that combines the advantages of reduced-form strategies -- transparent and credible identification -- with an important advantage of structural models -- the ability to make predictions about counterfactual outcomes and welfare. This recent work has developed formulas for the welfare consequences of various policies that are functions of high-level elasticities rather than deep primitives. These formulas provide theoretical guidance for the measurement of treatment effects using program evaluation methods. I present a general framework that shows how many policy questions can be answered by identifying a small set of sufficient statistics. I use this framework to synthesize the modern literature on taxation, social insurance, and behavioral welfare economics. Finally, I discuss topics in labor economics, industrial organization, and macroeconomics that can be tackled using the sufficient statistic approach.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Labor Supply Effects of Social Insurance
By Alan B. Krueger and Bruce D. Meyer
-
Cash-on-Hand and Competing Models of Intertemporal Behavior: New Evidence from the Labor Market
By David Card, Raj Chetty, ...
-
Moral Hazard vs. Liquidity and Optimal Unemployment Insurance
By Raj Chetty
-
Liquidity and Insurance for the Unemployed
By Robert Shimer and Iván Werning
-
Liquidity and Insurance for the Unemployed
By Iván Werning and Robert Shimer
-
A General Formula for the Optimal Level of Social Insurance
By Raj Chetty
-
Unemployment Insurance Savings Accounts
By Martin S. Feldstein and Daniel Altman
-
Reservation Wages and Unemployment Insurance
By Robert Shimer and Iván Werning
-
Reservation Wages and Unemployment Insurance
By Robert Shimer and Iván Werning