Hello everyone 
I am conducting a mlogit regression with three possible outcomes (the first one being my base), and my variable of interest is continuous and in log (more precisely, it's the log of the number of victims in a conflict). I also include a set of control variables. I use the option eform in my esttab command in order to obtain Relative Risk Ratios for my variables of interest (log victims and other controls).
On google I mostly found how to interpret these RRR in the case of dummy variables. However I found nothing about the interpretation of RRR in the case of a continuous variable, and nothing neither in the case of a continuous variable in log.
By interpretation, I mean the interpretation of magnitudes. I understand that if I find a significant and >1 RRR, it means that the likelihood of the outcome occuring relative to the base increases as the variable increases. What I miss is the interpretation in terms of magnitude. If my RRR is, let's say, 1.05, what does it mean in terms of "quantitative" change in the likelihood of my outcome relative to the base one?
Thank you in advance for your help

I am conducting a mlogit regression with three possible outcomes (the first one being my base), and my variable of interest is continuous and in log (more precisely, it's the log of the number of victims in a conflict). I also include a set of control variables. I use the option eform in my esttab command in order to obtain Relative Risk Ratios for my variables of interest (log victims and other controls).
On google I mostly found how to interpret these RRR in the case of dummy variables. However I found nothing about the interpretation of RRR in the case of a continuous variable, and nothing neither in the case of a continuous variable in log.
By interpretation, I mean the interpretation of magnitudes. I understand that if I find a significant and >1 RRR, it means that the likelihood of the outcome occuring relative to the base increases as the variable increases. What I miss is the interpretation in terms of magnitude. If my RRR is, let's say, 1.05, what does it mean in terms of "quantitative" change in the likelihood of my outcome relative to the base one?
Thank you in advance for your help

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