Dear Statalist users,
After reading many topics on this forum, I still haven't found a solution to my problem, so here goes:
I'm trying to estimate the effect of private equity funding on financial flexibility using an unbalanced panel dataset consisting of approximately 13000 firms over 25 years. In my dataset private equity funding is represented by a dummy variable (1 if backed by PE, 0 if not). Financial flexibility is measured on a continuous 0 to 1 scale. The basic model I'm trying to estimate is:
reg finflex pedummy <set of continuous control variables>
The problem is that I'm not sure which estimation method to apply. The Hausman test tells me to use fixed effects, however, this method omits the PE dummy because it's time-invariant. Since I do need to estimate the effect of PE, I'll have to use another method. However, I do not know which one to use.
Does anyone here have a suggestion on which method to apply? If my post misses any crucial information, I'm happy to elaborate.
Kind regards,
Stijn
After reading many topics on this forum, I still haven't found a solution to my problem, so here goes:
I'm trying to estimate the effect of private equity funding on financial flexibility using an unbalanced panel dataset consisting of approximately 13000 firms over 25 years. In my dataset private equity funding is represented by a dummy variable (1 if backed by PE, 0 if not). Financial flexibility is measured on a continuous 0 to 1 scale. The basic model I'm trying to estimate is:
reg finflex pedummy <set of continuous control variables>
The problem is that I'm not sure which estimation method to apply. The Hausman test tells me to use fixed effects, however, this method omits the PE dummy because it's time-invariant. Since I do need to estimate the effect of PE, I'll have to use another method. However, I do not know which one to use.
Does anyone here have a suggestion on which method to apply? If my post misses any crucial information, I'm happy to elaborate.
Kind regards,
Stijn
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