14 research outputs found
Start-up success of freelancers New microeconometric evidence from the German Socio-Economic Panel
If certain start-up characteristics will indicate a business success, knowing such characteristics
could generate more successful start-ups and more efficient start-up counseling. Our study
will contribut e to this by quantifying individual success determinants of freelance start-ups.
The data base for the microeconometric analyses of the survival of the first three years is a
revised German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) for 1992 until 2002, which allows to
incorporate institutional, personal and family/household socio-economic variables. We
describe and discuss the datawork to achieve compatible information over time within a
revised GSOEP and present microeconometric rare events logit, logit and probit results.
The start-up success measured as the probability to survive the first three years is first of all
influenced by an active labour force participation with its acquired skills and working
experiences just before the start-up period (rank 1), followed by a non-university degree as
the highest general human capital indicator (rank 2), a general (non-linear) experience
indicated by age (rank 3) and the business related background (rank 4) as the type of liberal
profession in the group of the liberal medical professions and the liberal technical and
scientific professions
The distribution and re-distribution of income of selfemployed as freelancers and entrepreneurs in Europe
The economic transformations of modern industrial societies have changed the labor markets in terms of
industrial relations and occupational structure. The transformation of the traditional welfare state, the
deregulation of the labor markets, the technological change and the reorganization of industrial structures
influenced strongly the attitude of individuals towards their preferred labor contract. The structural change of the
occupational structure was one of the results of this tendency. In particular the self-employed and freelancers
have been affected and are a driving factor of labor market changings. On the one side the value of autonomy
regarding industrial relations is becoming more important for employees. On the other side employers want to
get rid of social security contributions. As a result the multitudinousness of these professions increased.
The increasing varieties of occupations among the self-employed and freelancers influenced strongly their
income distribution. Recent studies for Germany have shown a great dispersion and a heterogeneous structure of
earnings in particular of freelancers (liberal professions) and self-employed. Though there are a variety of
international income distribution studies, but – as to the best to our knowledge – no study focusing on the selfemployed
and freelancers within the total labor force. In our study we concentrate on the income distribution of
self-employed and freelancers in different European countries. Based on the Luxembourg Income Study (LIS)
we analyze five different European countries and the United States structured by different types of welfare states
according to Esping Anderson. We analyze income distributional aspects, an occupational decomposition à la
Shorrocks, and re-distributional effects of the tax and transfer systems