Estimating Nonseparable Selection Models: A Functional Contraction Approach
Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 18:04 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
For a given selection function, potential outcome distributions in nonseparable models are nonparametrically identified from selected outcomes via contraction mapping iteration.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For a given selection function, the potential outcome distributions are nonparametrically identified from the selected outcome distributions and can be recovered using a simple iterative algorithm based on a contraction mapping. This result enables a full-information approach to estimating selection models without imposing parametric or separability assumptions on the outcome equation. The authors propose a two-step estimation strategy for the potential outcome distributions and the parameters of the selection function and establish the consistency and asymptotic normality of the resulting estimators.
What carries the argument
A contraction mapping that iteratively recovers potential outcome distributions from observed selected outcome distributions.
If this is right
- The resulting estimators for potential outcome distributions and selection function parameters are consistent and asymptotically normal.
- The method applies directly to settings with only selected outcomes observed, such as consumer demand models using transaction prices alone.
- It covers auctions with incomplete bid data and Roy models with data only on accepted wages.
- Monte Carlo simulations confirm reliable finite-sample performance across these applications.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The contraction approach could be nested inside a joint estimation routine that treats the selection function as unknown but parameterized, allowing one-step rather than two-step inference.
- Varying the assumed selection function over a range and tracing the implied potential distributions could yield partial identification bounds for counterfactuals.
- The same mapping principle might extend to selection problems in other fields, such as recovering full distributions from censored medical trial data.
- Testing whether the estimated distributions satisfy separability restrictions could serve as a specification check against conventional estimators.
Load-bearing premise
The selection function is treated as given or separately parameterized, and the contraction mapping has a unique fixed point that recovers the true potential outcome distributions.
What would settle it
Generating data from a known nonseparable selection model and checking whether the iterative algorithm converges to the true potential distributions rather than the selected ones would test the identification claim.
Figures
read the original abstract
We propose a novel method for estimating nonseparable selection models. We show that, for a given selection function, the potential outcome distributions are nonparametrically identified from the selected outcome distributions and can be recovered using a simple iterative algorithm based on a contraction mapping. This result enables a full-information approach to estimating selection models without imposing parametric or separability assumptions on the outcome equation. We propose a two-step estimation strategy for the potential outcome distributions and the parameters of the selection function and establish the consistency and asymptotic normality of the resulting estimators. Monte Carlo simulations demonstrate that our approach performs well in finite samples. The method is applicable to a wide range of empirical settings, including consumer demand models with only transaction prices, auctions with incomplete bid data, and Roy models with data on accepted wages.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes a novel method for estimating nonseparable selection models. It shows that, for a given selection function, the potential outcome distributions are nonparametrically identified from the selected outcome distributions and can be recovered using a simple iterative algorithm based on a contraction mapping. This enables a two-step estimation strategy for the potential outcome distributions and the parameters of the selection function, with established consistency and asymptotic normality. Monte Carlo simulations demonstrate good finite-sample performance. The method applies to settings such as consumer demand with transaction prices, auctions with incomplete bids, and Roy models with accepted wages.
Significance. If the contraction-mapping identification result holds under the stated conditions, the paper provides a useful nonparametric route to identification and estimation in selection models without requiring separability or parametric restrictions on the outcome equation. The iterative recovery algorithm is computationally attractive, and the two-step estimator with asymptotic theory supports practical use. Monte Carlo evidence is a strength, though the absence of real-data illustrations limits immediate empirical assessment.
major comments (2)
- [Estimation and asymptotics sections] The identification argument is explicitly conditional on a fixed selection function, but the two-step procedure estimates its parameters; the manuscript should derive how first-step estimation error propagates into the second-step asymptotic normality and consistency rates (see the estimation and asymptotics sections).
- [Identification section] The contraction-mapping property is asserted to deliver unique nonparametric identification, but the specific function space, metric, and bound on the contraction constant (strictly less than one) must be verified explicitly for the selection functions used in the consumer-demand, auction, and Roy-model examples.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract states the identification result but does not list the precise conditions on the selection function required for the contraction to hold; adding a brief clause would improve clarity.
- [Monte Carlo section] Monte Carlo results would benefit from reported standard errors or confidence bands around the bias and RMSE figures, as well as explicit rules for any data trimming or support restrictions.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We appreciate the referee's thoughtful review and recommendation for minor revision. We address the major comments below and will incorporate the suggested clarifications in the revised manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Estimation and asymptotics sections] The identification argument is explicitly conditional on a fixed selection function, but the two-step procedure estimates its parameters; the manuscript should derive how first-step estimation error propagates into the second-step asymptotic normality and consistency rates (see the estimation and asymptotics sections).
Authors: We agree with this observation. The current manuscript establishes consistency and asymptotic normality under the assumption of a known selection function in the identification step, but the two-step estimator involves estimating the selection parameters first. In the revision, we will extend the asymptotic analysis to account for the first-step estimation error, deriving the appropriate influence functions and verifying that the rates remain valid for the second-step estimators under standard regularity conditions. revision: yes
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Referee: [Identification section] The contraction-mapping property is asserted to deliver unique nonparametric identification, but the specific function space, metric, and bound on the contraction constant (strictly less than one) must be verified explicitly for the selection functions used in the consumer-demand, auction, and Roy-model examples.
Authors: We thank the referee for pointing this out. While the general contraction mapping theorem is applied in the identification section, we will add explicit verifications in an appendix or dedicated subsection for each empirical example. This will include specifying the function space (e.g., the space of bounded continuous functions equipped with the sup norm), the metric, and demonstrating that the contraction constant is strictly less than one for the relevant selection functions in the consumer demand, auction, and Roy model settings, using the maintained assumptions on the distributions and selection mechanisms. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation self-contained
full rationale
The paper's central identification result is stated as nonparametric recovery of potential outcome distributions from selected distributions via an iterative contraction mapping that is explicitly conditional on a fixed (given or separately estimated) selection function. The subsequent two-step estimator for selection parameters is described as standard and follows the mapping step. No equations reduce the target distributions to fitted inputs by construction, no self-citations are invoked as load-bearing uniqueness theorems, and no ansatz or renaming of known results is presented as a derivation. The approach is therefore independent of the quantities it claims to recover.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The selection model admits a contraction mapping that uniquely recovers the potential outcome distributions from the selected distributions.
Reference graph
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