Dear Statalist users,
I am conductiong a panel data analysis on 155 countries under the period 1998-2015. My panel is highly unbalanced. As a preliminary check, I used the Fisher unit root test and I found that only the dependent variable is non-stationary in level, but it is stationary in first difference. Performing a cointegration test afterwards is not feasible in my case because the usual tests by Kao (1999), Pedroni (2004), and Westerlund (2005) require that there’s no gaps in any panel’s series. I tried a log transformation of my dependent variable and I found that it becomes stationary in level.
I would like to know whether trasnforming my variable (in first-difference or in natural log) correctly solves the problem, especially that I am intended to use the two-step system GMM to estimate a dynamic panel model. Thanks a lot for your response.
I am conductiong a panel data analysis on 155 countries under the period 1998-2015. My panel is highly unbalanced. As a preliminary check, I used the Fisher unit root test and I found that only the dependent variable is non-stationary in level, but it is stationary in first difference. Performing a cointegration test afterwards is not feasible in my case because the usual tests by Kao (1999), Pedroni (2004), and Westerlund (2005) require that there’s no gaps in any panel’s series. I tried a log transformation of my dependent variable and I found that it becomes stationary in level.
I would like to know whether trasnforming my variable (in first-difference or in natural log) correctly solves the problem, especially that I am intended to use the two-step system GMM to estimate a dynamic panel model. Thanks a lot for your response.
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