Diagnosing sample-selection bias in historical heights: A reply to Komlos and A'Hearn

H Bodenhorn, TW Guinnane, TA Mroz - The Journal of Economic …, 2019 - cambridge.org
The Journal of Economic History, 2019cambridge.org
Our 2017 article in this Journal stresses the pitfalls of using choice-based samples in
economic history. A prominent example is the literature addressing the so-called antebellum
puzzle. Heights researchers claim that Americans grew shorter in the first half of the
nineteenth century, a period of robust economic growth. We argue that this result relies on
choice-based samples. Without knowing the process that led to inclusion in the sample,
researchers cannot properly estimate conditional mean heights. We proposed a diagnostic …
Our 2017 article in this Journal stresses the pitfalls of using choice-based samples in economic history. A prominent example is the literature addressing the so-called antebellum puzzle. Heights researchers claim that Americans grew shorter in the first half of the nineteenth century, a period of robust economic growth. We argue that this result relies on choice-based samples. Without knowing the process that led to inclusion in the sample, researchers cannot properly estimate conditional mean heights. We proposed a diagnostic that can detect, but not correct for, selection bias. Komlos and A’Hearn’s interpretation of our analysis confuses diagnosis with cure. We dispute their view that selection bias has been appreciated in the heights literature.
Cambridge University Press