I have unbalanced panel of firms for 2011-19. I would like to run logistic regression for unbalanced panel data with unequal number of observations for the dependent variable class.
To make it clearer, the dependent variable is (A)good performing firms with 2973 observations, (B) medium performing firms with 34,737 observations and (C)poor performing firms with 33,889 observations.
The independent variables are industry dummy for the industry the firm belongs to, debt-equity ratio for the firms, size and age of the firm.
I have a set of questions for the running logistic regression for panel data
(1) Can I run a logistic regression for panel data even when the number of observations within each class of dependent variable is highly skewed? Will it give sensible results?
(2) If yes, then how does one find whether to use fixed effects or random effects for panel logistic regression?
(3) Is weighted logistic panel regression more useful for my work? If yes, then how are the weights decided?
To make it clearer, the dependent variable is (A)good performing firms with 2973 observations, (B) medium performing firms with 34,737 observations and (C)poor performing firms with 33,889 observations.
The independent variables are industry dummy for the industry the firm belongs to, debt-equity ratio for the firms, size and age of the firm.
I have a set of questions for the running logistic regression for panel data
(1) Can I run a logistic regression for panel data even when the number of observations within each class of dependent variable is highly skewed? Will it give sensible results?
(2) If yes, then how does one find whether to use fixed effects or random effects for panel logistic regression?
(3) Is weighted logistic panel regression more useful for my work? If yes, then how are the weights decided?
Comment