2021
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3768347
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Self-employment and Subjective Well-Being

Abstract: Self-employment contributes to employment growth and innovativeness and many individuals want to become self-employed due to the autonomy and flexibility it brings. Using "subjective well-being" as a broad summary measure that evaluates an individual's experience of being self-employed, the chapter discusses evidence and explanations why self-employment is positively associated with job satisfaction, even though the self-employed often earn less than their employed peers, work longer hours and experience more … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…These results may seem paradoxical at first. Nevertheless, they are in line with empirical evidence suggesting that solo entrepreneurs may lack social support (Binder & Blankenberg, 2021) but have more significant preferences for autonomy (van Stel & van der Zwan, 2020). 3, Model (7), and include all controls, fixed effects, and entropy balancing weights.…”
Section: Empirical Tests Of H1 and H2supporting
confidence: 88%
“…These results may seem paradoxical at first. Nevertheless, they are in line with empirical evidence suggesting that solo entrepreneurs may lack social support (Binder & Blankenberg, 2021) but have more significant preferences for autonomy (van Stel & van der Zwan, 2020). 3, Model (7), and include all controls, fixed effects, and entropy balancing weights.…”
Section: Empirical Tests Of H1 and H2supporting
confidence: 88%
“…These results may seem paradoxical at first. Nevertheless, they are in line with empirical evidence suggesting that solo entrepreneurs may lack social support (Binder & Blankenberg, 2021) but have more significant preferences for autonomy (van Stel & van der Zwan, 2020). Notes: The figure depicts the predicted autonomy for salaried employees and the self-employed, according to supervisor status.…”
Section: Empirical Tests Of H1 and H2supporting
confidence: 88%
“…The empirical studies on subjective well-being tend to demonstrate that, compared with employees, self-employed individuals report higher levels of job satisfaction and satisfaction with their life in general (for overviews of recent research, see Stephan, 2018;Binder, 2018;Van der Zwan & Hessels, 2019;Ryff, 2019;Binder & Blankenberg, 2021). The prevailing view is that by engaging in entrepreneurship, people obtain additional well-being benefits not granted to paid employees.…”
Section: Solo Self-employment and Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%