Hi all,
I am Francesco Chrico, I am not a Stata expert, and I appreciate and value a lot the time you devote to help other people.
I have a problem/issue with some analyses I am running given that I am not sure which analysis I need to run.
I will try to give you some details about what I am doing: The dataset I have is of firms where the major owner is a male or female. I consider all the firms in existence in 2004 and follow them until 2008. I have dummy variable for gender (that do not vary over time), and a variable named “outcome” equal to : 1) continuation; 2) merger; 3) sale; 4) dissolution of the company. Of course each observation is linked with the "id" of the firm and the "year" when the exit happened or the firm continue.
Here the analyses Im trying to make:
Hypothesis 1: Firms with a female owner are less likely to exit (dissolve, sale or merge) the business (versus continuation) than firms with a male owner. Basically firms with a female owner are more likely to continue.
Hypothesis 2 :Firms with a female owner are more likely than firms with a male owner to exit by merger than exit by dissolution or sale.
Hypothesis 3: Firms with a female owner are less likely than firms with a male owner to exit by sale than exit by dissolution.
Thus, based on H2 and H3:
Hypothesis 4a. When the exit decision is made, firms with a female owner are more likely than firms with a male owner to follow a descending ranked order of exit preferences: merger, dissolution and sale.
Hypothesis 4b. When the exit decision is made, firms with a male owner are more likely than firms with a female owner to follow a descending ranked order of exit preferences: sale, dissolution and merger.
My view is that I can easily test H1 with competing risk regression (stcrreg in STATA) in survival analysis. But I am not sure it is correct to test H2 and H3 with survival analysis (and in case how given that continuation is not part of h2 and h3). H4a and H4b are a simple consequence of H2 and H3 but I m not sure if there is a way to test this empirically.
Definitively, the exit types (dissolution, sale and merger) are competing events….
Initially I used multinomial logit but I had problems because of the IIA issue. So I need to use something else. Not sure if survival analysis (and specifically competing risk regression or stratified cox model) may be an option. Or if I need to use multinomial probit, although I admit I dont know how to do it. Rather, for what I read, it seems to me that nested logit is not the best for me (I dont have a nested structure), but I may be wrong.
Many many thanks and again many thanks for your help.
Best
Francesco Chirico
I am Francesco Chrico, I am not a Stata expert, and I appreciate and value a lot the time you devote to help other people.
I have a problem/issue with some analyses I am running given that I am not sure which analysis I need to run.
I will try to give you some details about what I am doing: The dataset I have is of firms where the major owner is a male or female. I consider all the firms in existence in 2004 and follow them until 2008. I have dummy variable for gender (that do not vary over time), and a variable named “outcome” equal to : 1) continuation; 2) merger; 3) sale; 4) dissolution of the company. Of course each observation is linked with the "id" of the firm and the "year" when the exit happened or the firm continue.
Here the analyses Im trying to make:
Hypothesis 1: Firms with a female owner are less likely to exit (dissolve, sale or merge) the business (versus continuation) than firms with a male owner. Basically firms with a female owner are more likely to continue.
Hypothesis 2 :Firms with a female owner are more likely than firms with a male owner to exit by merger than exit by dissolution or sale.
Hypothesis 3: Firms with a female owner are less likely than firms with a male owner to exit by sale than exit by dissolution.
Thus, based on H2 and H3:
Hypothesis 4a. When the exit decision is made, firms with a female owner are more likely than firms with a male owner to follow a descending ranked order of exit preferences: merger, dissolution and sale.
Hypothesis 4b. When the exit decision is made, firms with a male owner are more likely than firms with a female owner to follow a descending ranked order of exit preferences: sale, dissolution and merger.
My view is that I can easily test H1 with competing risk regression (stcrreg in STATA) in survival analysis. But I am not sure it is correct to test H2 and H3 with survival analysis (and in case how given that continuation is not part of h2 and h3). H4a and H4b are a simple consequence of H2 and H3 but I m not sure if there is a way to test this empirically.
Definitively, the exit types (dissolution, sale and merger) are competing events….
Initially I used multinomial logit but I had problems because of the IIA issue. So I need to use something else. Not sure if survival analysis (and specifically competing risk regression or stratified cox model) may be an option. Or if I need to use multinomial probit, although I admit I dont know how to do it. Rather, for what I read, it seems to me that nested logit is not the best for me (I dont have a nested structure), but I may be wrong.
Many many thanks and again many thanks for your help.
Best
Francesco Chirico
Comment