Hi all,
I am working on ex-ante impact of bankruptcy reform that took place in 2016. I am observing whether the treated group firms (which i construct based on baseline period and a firm remains in that group across all the years including endline period) observe any treatment impact on the firm debt. It may be possible in this case that the reform may even impact the control group firms.
For this problem i have observed two models in the literature :
1. Debtit = b0 + b1 postt*treatedi + b2 postt + b3 controlit-1 + firm fixed effect + time fixed effect + Eit (very few)
2. Debtit = b0 + b1 postt*treatedi + b2 controlit-1 + firm fixed effect + time fixed effect + Eit (popular one)
Since there is firm fixed effect so dropping the treated variable seems right. But considering that time fixed effect has already captured the impact of post (or there is very high correlation between the two) it is better to drop post as if we drop time fixed effect and keep the post then the non reform time related effect may not be controlled and hence can impact results. It seems that the popular one is right.
Debtit = b0 + b1 postt+ b2 controlit-1 + firm fixed effect + Eit (if treated)
b1 is insignificant for control group but negatively significant for treated group.
Thanks and Regards
I am working on ex-ante impact of bankruptcy reform that took place in 2016. I am observing whether the treated group firms (which i construct based on baseline period and a firm remains in that group across all the years including endline period) observe any treatment impact on the firm debt. It may be possible in this case that the reform may even impact the control group firms.
For this problem i have observed two models in the literature :
1. Debtit = b0 + b1 postt*treatedi + b2 postt + b3 controlit-1 + firm fixed effect + time fixed effect + Eit (very few)
2. Debtit = b0 + b1 postt*treatedi + b2 controlit-1 + firm fixed effect + time fixed effect + Eit (popular one)
Since there is firm fixed effect so dropping the treated variable seems right. But considering that time fixed effect has already captured the impact of post (or there is very high correlation between the two) it is better to drop post as if we drop time fixed effect and keep the post then the non reform time related effect may not be controlled and hence can impact results. It seems that the popular one is right.
- Please confirm what is right to do and whether it makes any difference in case of balanced and unbalanced panel.
- Is it common, that when i observe the summary table i find that post reform the control group observes increased debt whereas the treated group observes decreased debt but using the second model i observe a positive sign for b1. I understand that many times after controlling for variables, firm fixed effects and time fixed effects the results may change. But it seems little weird to observe opposite result.
- While running the subsample analyis
Debtit = b0 + b1 postt+ b2 controlit-1 + firm fixed effect + Eit (if treated)
b1 is insignificant for control group but negatively significant for treated group.
Thanks and Regards
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