The book explores the resurgence of self-employment, particularly among women, in the context of globalization and labor market flexibility. It investigates the differing mechanisms that lead to self-employment for men and women, utilizing event history analysis to assess individual and structural factors affecting entry and exit from self-employment. Additionally, it compares earnings and job satisfaction between self-employed individuals and wage workers. Aimed at professionals and policymakers in developing countries, it also serves researchers in labor market studies and globalization.
Fengbin Chang Knihy


Gender differences
- 164 stránok
- 6 hodin čítania
Self-employment is reemerging in modern society. Many scholars attribute this trend to globalization, flexible employment, and the rise of female labor force participation. However, such observations tend to be constrained by oversimplification and insufficient micro level data. Although women's share of total self-employment significantly increased during the last decades of twentieth century in many post-industrial economies, one of the unanswered questions is whether the mechanism of becoming self-employed differs between women and men and thus results in different outcomes. This study uses event history analysis to examine the effects of individual and structural factors in determining an individual’s opportunities for entering into and exiting from self-employment. The author shows that labor market flexibility has a significant impact on people’s career choices. In addition, this study also compares earnings and job satisfaction between self-employed and wage workers. The book is addressed to professtionals and policy makers in developing countries. It is also directed towards researchers in stratification, labor market, comparative study, and globalization.