In his book "Introductory Econometrics", Jeffrey Woolridge states "The most we can know about how X affects Y is contained in the conditional distribution of Y given X".
Is this statement true?
Would Judea Pearl agree with this statement?
In his book "Introductory Econometrics", Jeffrey Woolridge states "The most we can know about how X affects Y is contained in the conditional distribution of Y given X".
Is this statement true?
Would Judea Pearl agree with this statement?
What does "X affects Y" mean? If it means "X is the cause of Y", then Pearl would not agree with it, because, in general, $P(Y=y \mid do(X=x)) \neq P(Y=y \mid X=x)$. However, I think that by "X affects Y" the author meant how $Y$ is dependent on $X$. In other words, the conditional probability of $Y$ given $X$ tells you if these random variables are dependent or not (provided that you know the marginals $P(X)$ and $P(Y)$), but it does not tell you if they are causally related.