Dear Statalists,
Im regressing a panel model with 160 units of observations over a time period of 30 years (annual data). To due unobserved effects and nonstationarity, Im using a first difference estimation method. When only my explanatory variables are included in one regression (without time dummies) the F-value corresponds to 68. If I add time dummies and a trend (constant) it drops to 11 and most of my controls become insignificant. Can somebody give me a possible explanation? I would expect the joint significance to increase if additional variables are added. Additionally in some of the regressions only three of the 29 time dummies are significant.
Hope for your help
CP
Im regressing a panel model with 160 units of observations over a time period of 30 years (annual data). To due unobserved effects and nonstationarity, Im using a first difference estimation method. When only my explanatory variables are included in one regression (without time dummies) the F-value corresponds to 68. If I add time dummies and a trend (constant) it drops to 11 and most of my controls become insignificant. Can somebody give me a possible explanation? I would expect the joint significance to increase if additional variables are added. Additionally in some of the regressions only three of the 29 time dummies are significant.
Hope for your help
CP
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