Hi all,
Suppose I’m regressing a continuous variable y on two dummies. The dummies comes from a continuous variable X, I split the continuous variable into three group (low, medium, high) and use low as the baseline group. I know the continuous variable X itself is endogenous, and I have find an instrument Z. However, if I run the regression with two dummies, then since the dummies are derived from X, they are also endogenous, so I need two instrument variables.
Is it possible to still use Z again in ivreghdfe?
Is there a way to transform Z somehow to get another IV?
Some explanation: the reason why I do not regress Y on X directly is because the relationship changes when X has different range. It is not linear, it could be any function form. This is why I want to first see: compared to low X group, what is the differential impact on Y from medium/high X group.
thank you
Suppose I’m regressing a continuous variable y on two dummies. The dummies comes from a continuous variable X, I split the continuous variable into three group (low, medium, high) and use low as the baseline group. I know the continuous variable X itself is endogenous, and I have find an instrument Z. However, if I run the regression with two dummies, then since the dummies are derived from X, they are also endogenous, so I need two instrument variables.
Is it possible to still use Z again in ivreghdfe?
Is there a way to transform Z somehow to get another IV?
Some explanation: the reason why I do not regress Y on X directly is because the relationship changes when X has different range. It is not linear, it could be any function form. This is why I want to first see: compared to low X group, what is the differential impact on Y from medium/high X group.
thank you
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