Journal
SOCIOLOGICAL FORUM
Volume 34, Issue 2, Pages 386-408Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/socf.12502
Keywords
economy; entrepreneurship; precariousness; self-employment; wage work; work-family
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We investigate the wage work and family determinants of self-employment entry using a panel study of Canadian workers (Canadian Work Stress and Health Study). Rather than treating the self-employed as a homogenous group-a characterization that conflates entrepreneurial ventures with lower quality and more precarious self-employment-we disaggregate self-employment entrants by occupational class. Descriptive analyses show that the nonprofessional self-employed-the most common form of self-employment observed in the study-are considerably more likely to report low income (<$25,000) and insufficient work hours compared to wage workers and the professional self-employed. Event history analyses based on a multinomial logistic model also reveal that poor wage-work quality-including low income, job insecurity, and unchallenging work-increases the likelihood of a transition from wage work into nonprofessional self-employment. In contrast, job autonomy and human capital predict an increased likelihood of a transition into professional self-employment. Our results suggest that both classic entrepreneurial and forced motivations explain self-employment entry when the self-employed's occupational class is distinguished; however, findings are mixed regarding the salience of work-family factors in predicting self-employment entry. We discuss the value of using a good jobs, bad jobs perspective to disaggregate the pathways from wage work into lower versus higher quality self-employment.
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