180 IV9a 2SLS intuition

This video introduces Two-Stage Least Squares (2SLS) as the practical estimation procedure for implementing Instrumental Variables (IV) in econometrics. It clarifies that IV is the general strategy, while 2SLS is the most common method used in practice to estimate causal effects when an explanatory variable (X) is endogenous. The core challenge addressed is how to overcome biased Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) estimates caused by 'contaminated' variation in X. 2SLS achieves this by leveraging an instrumental variable (Z) to isolate only the clean, exogenous variation in X. The process involves a two-stage regression: first, regressing X on Z to obtain predicted X (X-hat), and then regressing Y on this purified X-hat to derive the unbiased causal coefficient. The video explains the terminology, highlighting that while IV is the concept, 2SLS is the specific technique almost always implied when economists refer to IV regressions. The fundamental difference is that while OLS asks what happens to Y when X changes, 2SLS asks what happens to Y when X changes because of the instrument, allowing it to identify 'local effects.' It details the two stages for conceptual understanding, emphasizing that in practice, software executes these steps correctly in one go to ensure accurate standard errors. This method actively selects only the clean variation, a crucial distinction from OLS which aims to remove contamination when all relevant variables are available. The next video will compare OLS and 2SLS and present a more generalized 2SLS procedure. Visit AxiomTutoring.com for more econometrics resources and subscribe to @AxiomTutoringCourses for future lessons!