Dear Javier Rua Montes,
That is an excellent question. Loosely speaking, as you increase the number of powers in the RESET test, you broaden the range of alternatives against which the test has power, but reduce the power of the test against some alternatives. So, it is not surprising to see that the model passes the test when you add the cubes. The question is what to do in situations like that. There is not much you can do to change the specification of the model, but you can try to add regressors and possibly more data (gravity models often fail the RESET when we use just a subset of countries).
Best wishes,
Joao
That is an excellent question. Loosely speaking, as you increase the number of powers in the RESET test, you broaden the range of alternatives against which the test has power, but reduce the power of the test against some alternatives. So, it is not surprising to see that the model passes the test when you add the cubes. The question is what to do in situations like that. There is not much you can do to change the specification of the model, but you can try to add regressors and possibly more data (gravity models often fail the RESET when we use just a subset of countries).
Best wishes,
Joao
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