Statistical Nonsignificance in Empirical Economics
Author(s)
Abadie, Alberto
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<jats:p> Statistical significance is often interpreted as providing greater information than nonsignificance. In this article we show, however, that rejection of a point null often carries very little information, while failure to reject may be highly informative. This is particularly true in empirical contexts that are common in economics, where data-sets are large and there are rarely reasons to put substantial prior probability on a point null. Our results challenge the usual practice of conferring point null rejections a higher level of scientific significance than non-rejections. Therefore, we advocate visible reporting and discussion of nonsignificant results. (JEL C12, C90) </jats:p>
Date issued
2020Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of EconomicsJournal
American Economic Review: Insights
Publisher
American Economic Association