SERC Discussion Paper 109 by Giulia Faggio (SERC) and Olmo Silva (SERC, Department of Geography and Environment, LSE and IZA) published May 2012
Abstract
Research on entrepreneurship often uses information on self-employment to proxy for
business creation and innovative behaviour. However, little evidence has been collected on
the link between these measures.
In this paper, we use data from the UK Labour Force
Survey (LFS) combined with data from the Business Structure Database (BSD), and the
Community Innovation Survey (CIS) to study the relation between self-employment,
business creation and innovation.
In order to do so, we aggregate individual and firm-level
data at the Travel-to-Work Area (TTWA) and investigate how the incidence of self-employment correlates with the density of business start-ups and innovative firms.
Our
results show that in urban areas a higher incidence of self-employment positively and
strongly correlates with more business creation and innovation, but this is not true for rural
areas. Further analysis suggests that this urban/rural divide is related to lack of employment
opportunities in rural areas, which might push some workers into self-employment as a last
resort option.
JEL Classifications: L26, J21, R12, R23
Full text (PDF 56pp)
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