Applied Statistics - Holger Lutz Kern 

 The Applied Statistics Workshop resumes this week with a talk by  Holger Lutz Kern , a Ph.D. candidate at Cornell University currently visiting at Harvard. His research focuses on comparative political economy and behavior with a focus on causal inference from observational data.  His work has appeared in the Journal of Legislative Studies.  He will present a talk entitled "The Effect of Free Foreign Media on the Stability of Authoritarian Regimes: Evidence from a Natural Experiment in Communist East Germany."  The talk is based on joint work with Jens Hainmueller.  The presentation will be at noon on Wednesday, January 31 in Room N354, CGIS North, 1737 Cambridge St. As always, lunch will be provided. An abstract of the talk follows on the jump: 
 


 
A common claim in the democratization literature is that free foreign media undermine authoritarian rule. In this case study, we exploit a natural experiment to estimate the causal effect of exposure to West German television on East Germans' political attitudes. While one could receive West German television in most parts of East Germany, residents of Dresden were cut off from West German television due to Dresden's location in the Elbe valley. Using an ordered probit LARF instrumental variable estimator and survey data collected in 1988/9, we find that East Germans who watched West German television were *more* satisfied with life in East Germany and the communist regime. To explain this surprising finding, we demonstrate that East Germans consumed West German television primarily for its entertainment value and not because of its unbiased news reporting.  Archival data on the internal debates of the East German regime corroborate our argument.