Publication | Open Access
The Consequences of Teenage Childbearing: Consistent Estimates When Abortion Makes Miscarriage Non‐random
149
Citations
29
References
2012
Year
Family MedicineTeenage ChildbearingFertilityTeenage PregnancyReproductive HealthGynecologyConsistent EstimatorReproductive EpidemiologyHigh-risk PregnancyContraceptionConsistent EstimatesBiasPublic HealthDemographic ForecastingDecision TheoryStatisticsPregnancy PreventionSelection BiasMedicineEstimation StatisticMaternal HealthReduces Miscarriage RiskFertility PolicyAbortionAbortion TimingDemographyDecision Science
Miscarriage, even if biologically random, is not socially random. Willingness to abort reduces miscarriage risk. Because abortions are favorably selected among pregnant teens, those miscarrying are less favorably selected than those giving birth or aborting but more favorably selected than those giving birth. Therefore, using miscarriage as an instrument is biased towards a benign view of teen motherhood while OLS on just those giving birth or miscarrying has the opposite bias. We derive a consistent estimator that reduces to a weighted average of OLS and IV when outcomes are independent of abortion timing. Estimated effects are generally adverse but modest.
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