Using Self-employment as Proxy for Entrepreneurship: Some Empirical Caveats
Carl Magnus Bjuggren, Dan Johansson and Mikael Stenkula
June 14, 2010
Abstract: Research on entrepreneurship has
received an increased amount of interest in recent years, with
self-employment being used as the most common proxy for
"entrepreneurship" in empirical studies. However, there are various
ways of defining selfemployment, making it a somewhat dubious
proxy. This may flaw the analysis, especially in cross-country
studies, since the documentation of data often is insufficient and
difficult to access due to language barriers. We present an
analysis of Swedish self-employment data. We show that the
measurement of self-employment has changed over time to noticeably
affect the reported number of self-employed in the two major
statistical sources on self-employment. The reported development of
self-employment sometimes differs diametrically depending on
source. Sweden is occasionally erroneously reported to show the
largest increase in selfemployment in cross-country studies. Our
study mimics the results of other country-specific analyses and we
conclude that well-grounded conclusions require that the advantages
and disadvantages of different statistical sources are
recognized.
Keywords: Labor Force Survey, RAMS,
self-employed, self-employment, entrepreneurship.
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