Panel Regression of Arbitrarily Distributed Responses
Volume 7, Issue 2 (2009), pp. 255–266
Pub. online: 4 August 2022
Type: Research Article
Open Access
Published
4 August 2022
4 August 2022
Abstract
Abstract: The primary advantage of panel over cross-sectional regression stems from its control for the effects of omitted variables or ”unobserved heterogeneity”. However, panel regression is based on the strong assump tions that measurement errors are independently identically ( i.i.d.) and normal. These assumptions are evaded by design-based regression, which dispenses with measurement errors altogether by regarding the response as a fixed real number. The present paper establishes a middle ground between these extreme interpretations of longitudinal data. The individual is now represented as a panel of responses containing dependently non-identically distributed (d.n.d) measurement errors. Modeling the expectations of these responses preserves the Neyman randomization theory, rendering panel regression slopes ap proximately unbiased and normal in the presence of arbitrarily distributed measurement error. The generality of this reinterpretation is illustrated with German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP) responses that are discretely distributed on a 3-point scale.