Dear Professor Wooldridge,
Thanks so much for your valuable input. I really appreciate it. If you don't mind, I have a follow up question. The x variables are the variables I have developed to measure different aspects of human capital and individual characteristics of job applicants to predict work outcomes pre-hire. They are not the conventional variables such as experience, education, or other survey constructs we usually use in these situations. They're all probability values and extremely right-skewed with about 75% of each x variable equal to 0. I converted them to factor variables on p75 cutoff, and tried the regression but the results are still the same. Also, with vce(robust) the results remain the same.
My problem is that what drive my R-squared are the control variables, not the actual predictors. When predictors alone are in the regression, R-squared is 0.0165. My concern is that the x variables although significant do not really explain much variance in performance which probably makes the paper less interesting for publication. Is there anything else I can do about it? I know you and Carlo have kindly suggested some solutions, but the x variables still don't explain much of the variance.
On a different note, I should say I LOVE your extremely helpful econometrics book. It has helped me a lot in my econometrics class and beyond
Thanks so much for your valuable input. I really appreciate it. If you don't mind, I have a follow up question. The x variables are the variables I have developed to measure different aspects of human capital and individual characteristics of job applicants to predict work outcomes pre-hire. They are not the conventional variables such as experience, education, or other survey constructs we usually use in these situations. They're all probability values and extremely right-skewed with about 75% of each x variable equal to 0. I converted them to factor variables on p75 cutoff, and tried the regression but the results are still the same. Also, with vce(robust) the results remain the same.
My problem is that what drive my R-squared are the control variables, not the actual predictors. When predictors alone are in the regression, R-squared is 0.0165. My concern is that the x variables although significant do not really explain much variance in performance which probably makes the paper less interesting for publication. Is there anything else I can do about it? I know you and Carlo have kindly suggested some solutions, but the x variables still don't explain much of the variance.
On a different note, I should say I LOVE your extremely helpful econometrics book. It has helped me a lot in my econometrics class and beyond

Comment