Yashi Kapil
Research Scholar, School of Management
Bennett University.
Dear Yashi Kapil
Non‑significance does not indicate a model problem
It is common for demographic controls (age, gender, tenure) to show non‑significant effects in SEM.
Their role is to rule out alternative explanations, not necessarily to contribute significant variance.
As long as your hypothesized paths remain significant and the model fit indices are acceptable, the non‑significance of controls is not problematic.
Methodological acceptability
Yes, it is methodologically acceptable for control variables to be non‑significant while focal relationships are significant.
Many published SEM studies retain controls for transparency, even when they are not statistically significant.
Retention in the final model
Best practice is to retain control variables in the reported model, even if non‑significant, to demonstrate that you tested for demographic confounds.
Dropping them may raise reviewer concerns about omitted variable bias.
Higher‑order constructs vs. first‑order constructs
The interpretation does not fundamentally change because the dependent variable is a higher‑order construct.
Controls are still tested against the latent construct score; the logic of non‑significance remains the same.
Interpretation and reporting
Your suggested phrasing is appropriate:
“The effects of age, gender, and years of work experience on the dependent variable were found to be statistically non‑significant, suggesting that the outcome variable is relatively independent of these demographic characteristics. Therefore, the observed relationships among the focal study variables are unlikely to be explained by demographic differences among respondents.”
Alternatively, you can frame it more neutrally:
“Control variables (age, gender, work experience) were included in the model to account for demographic differences. None showed significant effects on the higher‑order construct, indicating that demographic characteristics did not confound the hypothesized relationships.”
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