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What drives self-employment survival for women and men? Evidence from Canada

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Article

Rybczynski, Kate

Journal of Labor Research

2015

36

1

Winter

27-43

family responsibilities ; gender ; self employment

Canada

Employment

http://.link.springer.com/

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12122-014-9194-4

English

Bibliogr.

"This paper investigates the determinants of self-employment survival among women and men using the Canadian Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics. Survival is analyzed in the context of a single outcome (exiting self-employment) and in the context of multiple outcomes or competing risks (i.e. self-employment exit due to failure, versus non-failure exits). The largest detriment to survival for women is number of children. Whereas children improve survival rates for men. Non-participation in the labor force prior to starting a self-employment spell increases the probability of failure for women, but not men. Consistent with the liquidity constraint hypothesis, women who have personal wealth are less likely to exit self-employment. For women, this wealth effect does not depend on exit type. However, for men, the availability of personal wealth reduces the probability of exiting self-employment due to failure, but increases the probability of non-failure exits."

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