
doi: 10.2139/ssrn.960005
handle: 10419/33791 , 10419/18393
This paper contributes to the policy-relevant question whether self-employment is a way out of (long-term) unemployment. We estimate the relationship between the entry rate into self-employment and previous (long-term) unemployment on the basis of pseudo-panel data for Germany in the period 1996-2002. The estimation method accounts for cohort fixed effects and measurement errors induced by the pseudo panel structure. We find that previous (long-term) unemployment significantly increases entry rates into self-employment for both men and women. These effects are quantitatively important, both in absolute terms and compared to other potential determinants of self-employment transitions, such as age, the level of vocational qualification and certain household characteristics.
unemployment, pseudopanel, ddc:330, J23, Unternehmensgründung, entry rate, entrepreneurship, self-employment, entrepreneurship, entry rate, start-ups, unemployment, pseudo-panel, age and cohort effects, self-employment, Selbstständige, start-ups, C35, Langzeitarbeitslosigkeit, J64, Deutschland, age and cohort effects, Schätzung, jel: jel:C35, jel: jel:J64, jel: jel:J23
unemployment, pseudopanel, ddc:330, J23, Unternehmensgründung, entry rate, entrepreneurship, self-employment, entrepreneurship, entry rate, start-ups, unemployment, pseudo-panel, age and cohort effects, self-employment, Selbstständige, start-ups, C35, Langzeitarbeitslosigkeit, J64, Deutschland, age and cohort effects, Schätzung, jel: jel:C35, jel: jel:J64, jel: jel:J23
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