Hi,
I am looking forward to some inputs regarding very high coeffcients in a linear regression model.
I have a DV that is continuous with values ranging from -infinity to +infinity. I have a regressor that is dichotomous with either 0 or 1. However, the number of 1's is very small compared to that of the 0's. Specifically, out of 158,374 observations, the regressor has 419 1's and 157,955 0's.
On doing a linear regression (with additional regressors and year dummies), I obtain very high coefficients for the regressor (4096; p<0.001). The R-sq for the model is 0.56.
Can anyone throw some light on the high coefficients? Is that normal? Or just something wrong with the model?
Thanks for your time,
I am looking forward to some inputs regarding very high coeffcients in a linear regression model.
I have a DV that is continuous with values ranging from -infinity to +infinity. I have a regressor that is dichotomous with either 0 or 1. However, the number of 1's is very small compared to that of the 0's. Specifically, out of 158,374 observations, the regressor has 419 1's and 157,955 0's.
On doing a linear regression (with additional regressors and year dummies), I obtain very high coefficients for the regressor (4096; p<0.001). The R-sq for the model is 0.56.
Can anyone throw some light on the high coefficients? Is that normal? Or just something wrong with the model?
Thanks for your time,
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