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Working Paper No. 1243

Well-being Effects of Self-employment: A Spatial Inquiry

Working Paper
Reference
Abreu, Maria, Özge Öner, Aleid Brouwer and Eveline van Leeuwen (2018). “Well-being Effects of Self-employment: A Spatial Inquiry”. IFN Working Paper No. 1243. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).

Authors
Maria Abreu, Özge Öner, Aleid Brouwer, Eveline van Leeuwen

Our paper presents an empirical analysis of entrepreneurial well-being using a large-scale longitudinal household survey from the UK that tracks almost 50,000 individuals across seven waves over the period 2009–2017, as well as a number of exploratory case studies. We contribute to the existing literature by investigating how entrepreneurial well-being varies across locations along the urban-rural continuum, and across wealthy-deprived neighbourhoods.

We use a Coarsened Exact Matching (CEM) approach to compare the well-being outcomes of individuals who switch into self-employment from waged employment, and show that entrepreneurial well-being, in the form of job satisfaction, is significantly higher for those living in semi-urban locations, relative to those living in urban and rural locations.

We argue that semi-urban locations provide an optimal combination of ease of doing business and quality of life. Our results also show that individuals in wealthy neighbourhoods who switch into self-employment experience higher job satisfaction than otherwise comparable individuals living in materially deprived neighbourhoods, although the latter experience greater levels of life satisfaction following the switch.