Dear members,
I am currently analyzing the determinants of sustainable investment using probit regressions and have encountered some perplexing results.
Initially, when I regressed "sustainable concerns" alone, it exhibited a positive and significant impact. However, when I introduced the variable "recycling," the effect of "sustainable concerns" became negative and insignificant. Subsequently, when I added three more variables to the model, "sustainable concerns" remained negative but turned significant, while "recycling" lost its significance.
These findings are particularly confusing since "sustainable concerns" is expected to have a positive impact on sustainable investment, or at the very least, no impact. The observed negative effect seems counterintuitive.
I am wondering if this could be indicative of a suppression effect, with "recycling" acting as the suppressor, or if the results suggest that all my variables might be confounding factors?
I would greatly appreciate your insights or suggestions on how to interpret these results and any guidance on how to address these issues.
Thank you,
I am currently analyzing the determinants of sustainable investment using probit regressions and have encountered some perplexing results.
Initially, when I regressed "sustainable concerns" alone, it exhibited a positive and significant impact. However, when I introduced the variable "recycling," the effect of "sustainable concerns" became negative and insignificant. Subsequently, when I added three more variables to the model, "sustainable concerns" remained negative but turned significant, while "recycling" lost its significance.
These findings are particularly confusing since "sustainable concerns" is expected to have a positive impact on sustainable investment, or at the very least, no impact. The observed negative effect seems counterintuitive.
I am wondering if this could be indicative of a suppression effect, with "recycling" acting as the suppressor, or if the results suggest that all my variables might be confounding factors?
I would greatly appreciate your insights or suggestions on how to interpret these results and any guidance on how to address these issues.
Thank you,
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