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Exploiting Independent Instruments: Identification and Distribution Generalization

Abstract

Instrumental variable models allow us to identify a causal function between covariates XX and a response YY, even in the presence of unobserved confounding. Most of the existing estimators assume that the error term in the response YY and the hidden confounders are uncorrelated with the instruments ZZ. This is often motivated by a graphical separation, an argument that also justifies independence. Positing an independence restriction, however, leads to strictly stronger identifiability results. We connect to the existing literature in econometrics and provide a practical method called HSIC-X for exploiting independence that can be combined with any gradient-based learning procedure. We see that even in identifiable settings, taking into account higher moments may yield better finite sample results. Furthermore, we exploit the independence for distribution generalization. We prove that the proposed estimator is invariant to distributional shifts on the instruments and worst-case optimal whenever these shifts are sufficiently strong. These results hold even in the under-identified case where the instruments are not sufficiently rich to identify the causal function.

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