Causal Identification under Interference: The Role of Treatment Assignment Independence
Abstract
Empirical researchers routinely invoke the no-interference or individualistic treatment response (ITR) assumption to identify causal effects in observational studies, despite concerns that interference across units may arise in many economic settings. This paper studies the causal content of standard ITR-based identification formulas when arbitrary interference is present. We show that, under restrictions on dependence between treatment assignments across units, conventional ITR-based identification formulas -- including those underlying selection-on-observables, instrumental variables, regression discontinuity designs, and difference-in-differences -- identify well-defined causal objects: types of average direct effects (ADEs). These results do not require knowledge of the interference structure or specification of exposure mappings. We also propose a sensitivity analysis framework that quantifies the robustness of statistical inference to violations of treatment-assignment independence under arbitrary interference.
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