Recent evidence has shown that entrants into self-employment are disproportionately drawn from the tails of the earnings and ability distributions. This observation is explained by a multi-task model of occupational choice in which frictions in the labor market induces mismatches between firms and workers, and mis-assignment of workers to tasks. The model also yields distinctive predictions relating prior work histories to earnings and to the probability of entry into self-employment. These predictions are tested with the Korean Labor and Income Panel Study, from which we find considerable support for the model.entreprenuership; self-employment; jack-of-all trades; skill complementarity
We explore the transition from paid work to self-employment using three explanatory variables: paid ...
While the existing literature on self-employment choice has focused on individual differences, we co...
This paper introduces a quantitative model with risky entrepreneurship and search frictions matching...
International audienceRecent evidence has shown that entrants into self-employment are disproportion...
Mimeo, 2010In some datasets, the self-employed earn markedly less than wage earners, even though tho...
Occupations divide the labor market into separate repositories of skill, where labor market friction...
This dissertation is composed of three essays using labor search models to explore the role of skill...
This study explores two important aspects of entrepreneurship — liquidity constraints and serial ent...
During the last two decades, skill mismatches have become one of the most important issues of policy...
We develop a model of self-employment in the search and matching frame-work of Mortensen and Pissari...
What determines the earnings of a worker relative to his peers in the same occupation? What makes a ...
textabstractWe examine whether having previously been self-employed is a negative signal on the job ...
This paper studies the dynamics of skill mismatch over the business cycle. We build a tractable dire...
Abstract Self-employed workers account for between 8 and 30 % of participants in the labor markets o...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020The labor market is undoubtedly the closest and most i...
We explore the transition from paid work to self-employment using three explanatory variables: paid ...
While the existing literature on self-employment choice has focused on individual differences, we co...
This paper introduces a quantitative model with risky entrepreneurship and search frictions matching...
International audienceRecent evidence has shown that entrants into self-employment are disproportion...
Mimeo, 2010In some datasets, the self-employed earn markedly less than wage earners, even though tho...
Occupations divide the labor market into separate repositories of skill, where labor market friction...
This dissertation is composed of three essays using labor search models to explore the role of skill...
This study explores two important aspects of entrepreneurship — liquidity constraints and serial ent...
During the last two decades, skill mismatches have become one of the most important issues of policy...
We develop a model of self-employment in the search and matching frame-work of Mortensen and Pissari...
What determines the earnings of a worker relative to his peers in the same occupation? What makes a ...
textabstractWe examine whether having previously been self-employed is a negative signal on the job ...
This paper studies the dynamics of skill mismatch over the business cycle. We build a tractable dire...
Abstract Self-employed workers account for between 8 and 30 % of participants in the labor markets o...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020The labor market is undoubtedly the closest and most i...
We explore the transition from paid work to self-employment using three explanatory variables: paid ...
While the existing literature on self-employment choice has focused on individual differences, we co...
This paper introduces a quantitative model with risky entrepreneurship and search frictions matching...