Discussion paper

DP3661 Self-Employment and Labour Market Transitions: A Multiple State Model

We use the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) to estimate a multiple state transition model with three possible labour market states: self-employment, employment, and unemployment. This enables us to assess the effects of changes in demographic characteristics and economic conditions on the probabilities of exiting and entering these states. We allow for unobservable individual heterogeneity, duration dependence, lagged duration dependence and state dependence. Three main results are obtained. First, the aggregated unemployment rate is found to have a positive effect on the probability of becoming self-employed (push effect). Second, unemployed individuals are found to be more likely to become self-employed but the duration of their unemployment drastically reduces this probability. Third, the government policies undertaken during the 1980s are found to have been successful in promoting the entrance into self-employment, but not in preventing the exit from self-employment.

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Citation

Martinez-Granado, M (2002), ‘DP3661 Self-Employment and Labour Market Transitions: A Multiple State Model‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 3661. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp3661