“IV Etiquette? 

 One of my most embarrassing experiences occurred surrounding the use of instrumental variables in   my ASR article with Sanjeev Khagram on inequality and corruption (2005) . The article developed from my qualifying paper on causes of corruption (2003), in which I examined several hypotheses on the causal effects of inequality, democracy, economic development, and trade openness. Since all these four explanatory variables may be affected by corruption, I tried to find appropriate instruments. Initially, I tried five: latitude, # frost days, malaria prevalence index, ethno-linguistic fractionalization, and constructed openness. They had a strong predictive power for the endogenous variables in the first stage regression, and the p-values for the over-identification test in the second stage regressions were generally large enough so that I could not reject the null hypothesis of no correlation between the instruments and the error term of the regression.  I worked with Professor Khagram to make a publishable article from my qualifying paper, and we submitted our manuscript to the ASR. The first review we received from the editor was encouraging. The editor advised us to “revise and resubmit? in his three-page long letter, which showed his interest in our paper. But the editor as well as an anonymous reviewer asked us to provide an argument explaining how our instruments were correlated with the endogenous variables but not directly correlated with corruption. I initially considered responding to this critique by citing Rodrik et al.’s draft paper entitled  “Institutions Rule: The Primacy of Institutions over Geography and Integration in Economic Development?  (later published in the Journal of Economic Growth, 2004), which argued, “An instrument is something that simply has some desirable statistical properties. It need not be a large part of the causal story.?  

 However, I was criticized regarding the use of instruments when I presented at a Work-in-Progress Seminar at the Kennedy School of Government and at Comparative Political Economy Conference at Yale University in spring 2004. In the Work-in-Progress Seminar, some professors at the Kennedy School noted that overidentification test can pass if they are all wrong in the same direction. In the Yale conference, Professor Daron Acemoglu of MIT was a discussant for my paper, and he used the term “IV etiquette? to emphasize the importance of giving a plausible story for the first stage. He pointed that without a clear story for the fist stage, it is impossible to tell whether the instrument is uncorrelated with unobserved determinants of the dependent variable.  It was really an embarrassing moment when I was criticized for the lack of etiquette in front of many scholars. 

 So, I had to find more convincing instruments. In this regard, I have to thank my friend, Andrew Leigh, who was a doctoral student in public policy then and is currently Research Fellow at Australian National University. He found that “mature cohort size? can be used as an instrument for inequality in his dissertation paper entitled  "Does Equality Lead to Fraternity?" , based on  Higgins and Williamson's (1999)  theory of cohort size effect on income inequality.   Also, I came to realize how conference presentations and discussions can be helpful in improving the quality of research.