Hello Statalist!
I am working on a project where I am measuring employment precarity as a multidimensional index using the Alkire-Foster methodology. So each dimension has a weight w, and each dimension is made up of one or more indicators I. The indicators are dummies, equal to 1 if the individual is deprived in the indicator and 0 otherwise. Assuming there are 3 indicators, the multidimensional index is computed as
index = w1I1 + w2I2+ w3I3
This means that index is between 0 and 1. In terms of the my study, 0 means no employment precarity, and 1 means the individual is deprived in all the dimensions of precarity (which is rarely the case). My question is this: if I want to interpret the coefficient of index in a regression, would it be right to say a "unit increase" (from 0 to 1) in the index is associated with x units change in the outcome?
I am a bit confused because the index is continuous, and it may not be appropriate to consider a move from one end of the spectrum to another as a unit change.
Thanks for your help!
I am working on a project where I am measuring employment precarity as a multidimensional index using the Alkire-Foster methodology. So each dimension has a weight w, and each dimension is made up of one or more indicators I. The indicators are dummies, equal to 1 if the individual is deprived in the indicator and 0 otherwise. Assuming there are 3 indicators, the multidimensional index is computed as
index = w1I1 + w2I2+ w3I3
This means that index is between 0 and 1. In terms of the my study, 0 means no employment precarity, and 1 means the individual is deprived in all the dimensions of precarity (which is rarely the case). My question is this: if I want to interpret the coefficient of index in a regression, would it be right to say a "unit increase" (from 0 to 1) in the index is associated with x units change in the outcome?
I am a bit confused because the index is continuous, and it may not be appropriate to consider a move from one end of the spectrum to another as a unit change.
Thanks for your help!
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