1. Immigrant-native differences in long-term self-employment
- Author
-
Chizheng Miao, Mats Hammarstedt, Lina Aldén, and Spencer Bastani
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Entrepreneurship ,Economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Immigration ,Integration ,Labor income ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Term (time) ,Long-term ,Work (electrical) ,Capital (economics) ,0502 economics and business ,Survey data collection ,Self-employment ,Demographic economics ,Business ,Nationalekonomi ,050207 economics ,Survey ,050203 business & management ,media_common - Abstract
We study immigrant-native differences in long-term self-employment in Sweden combining population-wide register data and a unique survey targeting a large representative sample of the total population of long-term self-employment. Using the registers, we analyze the evolution of labor and capital incomes during the first 10 years following self-employment entry. We find that immigrant-native differences in labor income become smaller, whereas immigrant-native differences in capital income grow stronger, over the course of self-employment. These findings are robust to controlling for factors such as organizational form and type of industry. We use the survey data to gain further insights into immigrant-native differences among the long-term self-employed, and show that immigrant self-employed experience more problems and earn less, but work harder than native self-employed. They also have a less personal relation to their customers, do not enjoy their work as much as natives, and appear to have different perspectives on self-employment in general.
- Published
- 2021