Hi,
I am new to stata and have trouble with specifying my model. I have panel data for appr 11000 individuals and 3 years. My dependent variable is bivariate (but could be made into an ordered discrete variable with 3 values). I am now trying to choose between fixed and random effects. The Hausman test rejects the null hypothesis of non-systematic difference, so I guess that means I should use fixed. However, as I have understood it, running a fixed effect regression would disregard all individuals that show the same value all three years for any variable. Considering I do not have much variation in my dependent variable, isn't random effects to prefer so that I won't lose too many observations? If I use random effects, how do I motivate this? I have read that one could use "individual random effects" (e.g. Ferrer-i-Carbonel, 2005) and that this would be something "in between" fixed and random effects, where one can choose what independent variables that the error term is allowed to correlate with. Has anyone used this and what are your experiences with this? Moreover, would it be better to define my dependent variable as a 3-value ordered discrete variable in order to have more variation (still not much though)?
Thanks!
I am new to stata and have trouble with specifying my model. I have panel data for appr 11000 individuals and 3 years. My dependent variable is bivariate (but could be made into an ordered discrete variable with 3 values). I am now trying to choose between fixed and random effects. The Hausman test rejects the null hypothesis of non-systematic difference, so I guess that means I should use fixed. However, as I have understood it, running a fixed effect regression would disregard all individuals that show the same value all three years for any variable. Considering I do not have much variation in my dependent variable, isn't random effects to prefer so that I won't lose too many observations? If I use random effects, how do I motivate this? I have read that one could use "individual random effects" (e.g. Ferrer-i-Carbonel, 2005) and that this would be something "in between" fixed and random effects, where one can choose what independent variables that the error term is allowed to correlate with. Has anyone used this and what are your experiences with this? Moreover, would it be better to define my dependent variable as a 3-value ordered discrete variable in order to have more variation (still not much though)?
Thanks!
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