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WORKING PAPER
Selection Bias in Studies of Sanctions Efficacy
Nooruddin, Irfan
Abstract
Sanctions rarely work but they continue to be used frequently by policymakers. Previous
research on the determinants of sanctions identifies various factors that are thought to
contribute to sanctions success but do not give us an answer to the original puzzle of why
this ineffective policy is so commonly used. I argue that this is because studies of
sanctions have ignored the problem of strategic censoring by focusing only on cases of
observed sanctions. In this paper, I develop a unified model of sanction imposition and
success and test it using a simultaneous equation censored probit model. The selection-
corrected sanction model finds that the process by which sanctions are imposed is linked
to the process by which some succeed while others fail, and that the unmeasured factors
that lead to sanction imposition are negatively related to their success.
Keywords
censored probit sanctions strategic censoring
File
Uploaded
04-05-2001
Document ID Number
145
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