Entrepreneurship from Scratch: Lessons on the Entry Decision into Self-Employment from Transition Economies
This paper exploits the rapid rise in self-employment rates in post-communist Eastern Europe as a valuable "quasi-experiment" for understanding the sources of entrepreneurship. A relative demand-supply model and an individual sectoral choice model are used to analyze a 1993 survey of 27,000 adults in six transition economies. Estimated self-employment earnings premia are positive, and the data imply positive selection into both employee and self-employment status. Structural probit estimates show the probability of self-employment entry is unassociated with former Communist Party affiliation but positively related to schooling, pre-transition family income, receipt of property in restitution, pre-communist family business-holding, and predicted earnings differential. Cross-country variation in predicted self-employment entry rates and relative earnings provide evidence on the demand and supply factors affecting the decision to become an entrepreneur.
Year of publication: |
1999-12
|
---|---|
Authors: | Earle, John S. ; Sakova, Zuzana |
Institutions: | Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) |
Subject: | Entrepreneurship | self-employment | transition | small business | selection bias | structural probit Eastern Europe | Bulgaria | Czech Republic | Hungary | Poland | Russia | Slovakia |
Saved in:
freely available
Extent: | application/pdf |
---|---|
Series: | |
Type of publication: | Book / Working Paper |
Notes: | Number 79 47 pages |
Classification: | J23 - Employment Determination; Job Creation; Demand for Labor; Self-Employment ; J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity ; J62 - Occupational and Intergenerational Mobility ; M13 - Entrepreneurship ; O57 - Comparative Studies of Countries ; P2 - Socialist Systems and Transitional Economies |
Source: |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005703823