aer-robustnesslisted
Install: claude install-skill brycewang-stanford/AER-skills
# AER Robustness
## Overview
A modern AER referee report contains three predictable demands:
1. **Robustness** — does the result survive specification changes?
2. **Heterogeneity** — where does the effect concentrate, and is that consistent with the proposed channel?
3. **Mechanism** — *why* does X cause Y?
This skill anticipates all three so that the referee finds the answer already in the paper. Skipping this step turns a referee report into a 6-month delay.
## When to Use
- The main result table exists but the rest of the empirical section is thin
- An R&R demands "additional checks" without specifying which
- Drafting the appendix before submission
- Diagnosing why a prior submission drew a "needs more robustness" rejection
## The Referee-Anticipating Battery
Every empirical AER paper should report, at minimum:
### Robustness
1. **Alternative specifications** — drop covariates one at a time; include fixed effects at finer/coarser granularity; weight observations differently
2. **Alternative samples** — drop the largest unit; drop the most influential time period; restrict to balanced panel; restrict to comparable subsets
3. **Alternative outcome definitions** — log vs. level; winsorized at 1% / 5%; alternative deflators
4. **Alternative clustering** — cluster at the next-higher level (e.g., state if main is county); two-way cluster; wild cluster bootstrap if few clusters
5. **Alternative estimators** — if main is OLS, show IV; if main is TWFE, show Callaway-Sant