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Labour
Economics
Self-employment
For over a century, economic activity in almost all industrialized
countries shifted from small firms towards larger organizations, until
this trend ceased and began to reverse in the mid-1970s. Much of this
reversal, at least in the US, reflected a rise in the share of the
self-employed in the labour force. In Discussion Paper No. 871, Zoltán
Acs, Research Fellow David Audretsch and David Evans
identify how the self-employment rate has varied over time and across a
range of countries and apply recent theories to account for these
variations. Many OECD countries besides the US exhibited an increase in
self-employment from the mid-1970s or earlier, although in others
including Austria and France it steadily declined throughout the 1970s
and 1980s. LDCs for which data are available showed a similar diverse
pattern. Within the OECD, self-employment rate ranges from 5.5% in
Austria to 17.1% in Italy; in the LDCs considered, self-employment
ranged from 3.1% in Botswana to 86.2% in Nepal. These cross-country
differences in the level and time-series of self-employment are
important to public policy concerning the organization of labour and
industrial markets. Some 130 million individuals world-wide are
self-employed (excluding agriculture), including a tenth of the OECD
countries' labour force. Differences in national time-series for
self-employment may also shed light on why its downward trend ceased and
even reversed in many cases in the 1970s.
Acs, Audretsch and Evans find that the stage of economic development
contributes substantially to the diversity of self-employment rates both
across countries and over time. As economies become more capital
intensive, the optimal firm size increases, which reduces the returns to
entrepreneurship relative to likely earnings from working in an
incumbent corporation. The shift from manufacturing to services and the
rise in unemployment in many OECD countries in the 1970s more than
offset the progress of economic development, however, which produced the
observed increases in their self-employment rates. The authors conclude
that self-employment will probably resume its long-term downward trend
as per capita wealth increases in developed and less developed countries
alike.
Why Does the Self-Employment Rate Vary Across Countries and Over
Time?
Zoltán J Acs, David B Audretsch and David S Evans
Discussion Paper No. 871, January 1994 (AM)
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