I am estimating a dynamic panel, and I am seeking to avoid IV-type estimators, such as Arellano-Bond. I am currently having what appears to be success with xtbcfe and xtdpdbc.
But I want to try estimating OLS FE and OLS pooled, which have opposite biases, so that I can sandwich the estimate between two bounds.
My question is: should the OLS pooled include my time-invariant variables? Conceptually, am I . . .
(1) Starting with OLS pooled with time-invariant variables, and then adding FE which wipe out those variables, or
(2) Starting with OLS FE and then removing the FE without doing anything else to the variable list?
My estimate of OLS pooled with time-invariant variables is almost identical to OLS FE, whereas my OLS pooled without time-invariant variables is quite different.
Obviously, OLS pooled with more variables is less biased than OLS pooled with fewer variables. But I don't know if that means that OLS pooled with time-invariant variables is the proper estimator to compare to FE for the purposes of sandwiching my dynamic panel Nickell bias.
Thank you.
But I want to try estimating OLS FE and OLS pooled, which have opposite biases, so that I can sandwich the estimate between two bounds.
My question is: should the OLS pooled include my time-invariant variables? Conceptually, am I . . .
(1) Starting with OLS pooled with time-invariant variables, and then adding FE which wipe out those variables, or
(2) Starting with OLS FE and then removing the FE without doing anything else to the variable list?
My estimate of OLS pooled with time-invariant variables is almost identical to OLS FE, whereas my OLS pooled without time-invariant variables is quite different.
Obviously, OLS pooled with more variables is less biased than OLS pooled with fewer variables. But I don't know if that means that OLS pooled with time-invariant variables is the proper estimator to compare to FE for the purposes of sandwiching my dynamic panel Nickell bias.
Thank you.
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