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Journal ArticleDOI

The best and the brightest or the least successful? Self-employment entry among male wage-earners in Sweden

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors analyzed self-employment entry among Swedish-born male wage-earners and found a positive linear relationship between the income residual and performance, and found that the self-employed are drawn from both tails of the residual distribution only if it is a matter of unincorporated firms.
Abstract
This paper analyzes self-employment entry among Swedish-born male wage-earners. Is it the best and the brightest or the least successful that become self-employed? The residual from an income regression is used as an indicator of who belongs to which group. We find that both wage-earners who receive a lower income than predicted, i.e. have a negative residual, and those who receive a higher income than predicted, i.e. have a positive residual, are more likely to become self-employed than those who receive an income close to the predicted one. However, splitting self-employment into different types depending on corporate form and number of employees, we find that the self-employed are drawn from both tails of the residual distribution only if it is a matter of unincorporated firms. Wage-earners who become self-employed and start an incorporated firm are only drawn from the top of the residual distribution. Using self-employment income and turnover as measures of self-employment performance, we find a positive linear relationship between the income residual and performance.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Individual determinants of self-employment entry: what do we really know?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a comprehensive survey of the impact of these factors, covering both the theoretical arguments and the main conclusions emerging from the empirical studies, and analyze twelve critical determinant factors of the entry into self-employment grouped into seven categories.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Careers Perspective on Entrepreneurship

TL;DR: In this paper, the decision to found a new venture were thought of as one of many options that individuals consider as they try to structure a meaningful and rewarding career, and there is much to be learned by conceiving of entrepreneurship not solely as a final destination, but as a step along a career trajectory.
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Individual Determinants of Self-Employment Entry – What Do We Really Know?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a comprehensive survey of the impact of these factors, covering both the theoretical arguments and the main conclusions emerging from the empirical studies, and analyze twelve critical determinant factors of the entry into self-employment grouped into seven categories: (i) basic individual characteristics (gender, age, and marital status and children); (ii) family background (parents and spouse); personality characteristics (risk attitude and other psychological traits); (iv) human capital (education and experience); (v) health condition; (vi) nationality and ethnicity; and (vii) access
Journal ArticleDOI

The entrepreneurial earnings puzzle: Mismeasurement or real?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors empirically analyzed several potential explanations for the underreporting of income by entrepreneurs and found that after correcting for income underreporting, the mean financial gain to entrepreneurship is positive and large, greater than 42%.
Posted Content

The entrepreneurial earnings puzzle: Mismeasurement or real?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors empirically analyzed several potential explanations for the underreporting of income by entrepreneurs and found that after correcting for income underreporting, the mean financial gain to entrepreneurship is positive and large, greater than 42%.
References
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MonographDOI

The Economics of Entrepreneurship

TL;DR: The second edition of The Economics of Entrepreneurship as discussed by the authors is an essential resource for scholars following the current state of this fast-moving field, covering a broad range of topics in unparalleled depth.
Book ChapterDOI

The Impact of Entrepreneurship on Economic Growth

TL;DR: In this article, the consequences of entrepreneurship for macro-economic growth are discussed, including the effects of the choice between entrepreneurship and employment, and the effect of entrepreneurship in endogenous growth models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-employment in OECD countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the role and influence of self-employment across the OECD and found that the self-employed have higher levels of job satisfaction than employees and are less willing to move from their neighborhoods, towns and regions than are employees, presumably because of the pull of their customers.
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