Dear all,
I am currently working on my master's thesis where I estimate a FE model which looks the following:
y_it = a_0 + a_i + x_it*beta1+ crisis*(d_0 + d_i + x_it*beta2) + epsilon_it,
where "crisis" is a dummy that has value one with the beginning of recent financial crisis in Europe. "a_i" and "d_i" are country-specific fixed effects and "x_it" explanatory variables. The model allows to investigate changing coefficients "beta1" to "beta1 + beta2" and "a_i" to "a_i + d_i" when the crisis occurs.
Currently I am struggeling with an argumentation whether to include country-specific fixed effects in the crisis interaction or not. This is done in a reference paper. However, results seem to be more economically meaningful when not including the "d_i"-dummies.
The economic argumentation would be - as I understand - that there are time-constant unobservables for each country that only change with the beginning of the crisis.
But are there other econometric argumentations to include these "d_i"? Is it somehow necessary because I use FE estimation? Or is there no econometric cause - only the economic theory described at the beginning of this paragraph? And would you agree on this argumentation or not?
I would very much appreciate some thoughts on this problem.
Thanks in advance!
Chris
I am currently working on my master's thesis where I estimate a FE model which looks the following:
y_it = a_0 + a_i + x_it*beta1+ crisis*(d_0 + d_i + x_it*beta2) + epsilon_it,
where "crisis" is a dummy that has value one with the beginning of recent financial crisis in Europe. "a_i" and "d_i" are country-specific fixed effects and "x_it" explanatory variables. The model allows to investigate changing coefficients "beta1" to "beta1 + beta2" and "a_i" to "a_i + d_i" when the crisis occurs.
Currently I am struggeling with an argumentation whether to include country-specific fixed effects in the crisis interaction or not. This is done in a reference paper. However, results seem to be more economically meaningful when not including the "d_i"-dummies.
The economic argumentation would be - as I understand - that there are time-constant unobservables for each country that only change with the beginning of the crisis.
But are there other econometric argumentations to include these "d_i"? Is it somehow necessary because I use FE estimation? Or is there no econometric cause - only the economic theory described at the beginning of this paragraph? And would you agree on this argumentation or not?
I would very much appreciate some thoughts on this problem.
Thanks in advance!
Chris
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