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Dependent self-employed individuals: are they different from paid employees?
[journal article]
Abstract Purpose: This study focusses on dependent self-employment, which covers a situation where a person works for the same employer as a typical worker whilst on a self-employment contractual basis, i.e. without a traditional employment contract and without certain rights granted to "regular" employees. ... view more
Purpose: This study focusses on dependent self-employment, which covers a situation where a person works for the same employer as a typical worker whilst on a self-employment contractual basis, i.e. without a traditional employment contract and without certain rights granted to "regular" employees. Design/methodology/approach: The research exploits the individual-level dataset of 35 European countries extracted from the 2017 edition of the European Labour Force Survey (EU LFS) and compares the characteristics of employees and dependent self-employed individuals. Methodologically, the study relies on the estimation of a multivariate logistic regression model. Findings: The main hypothesis assuming that dependent self-employed work most often in low-skilled occupations was empirically supported. There was also a non-linear (u-shaped) relationship between the years of accumulated experience (with a turning point at 35 years) and the likelihood of being dependent self-employed. Other results showed that dependent self-employed are less likely to be women and the dependent self-employed are more likely born outside of the countries where the dependent self-employed participate in the labour markets. Originality/value: The study contributes to the field by adopting a comparable definition of dependent self-employment and exploiting the recent theoretical support of The Work Precarity Framework. The phenomenon should still be addressed by policymakers and labour office representatives, aiming to protect, primarily, vulnerable lower-skilled workers. The ongoing research should study the longitudinal dimension of dependent self-employment with a focus on motivational aspects.... view less
Keywords
self-employment; employment relationship; salaried employee; low qualified worker; precarious employment; EU
Classification
Labor Market Research
Free Keywords
Dependent self-employment; Heterogeneity of entrepreneurs; Bogus; Fake; False; Sham; Pseudo or involuntary self-employed; EU-LFS 2017
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 704-720
Journal
Employee Relations, 45 (2023) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-11-2022-0502
ISSN
0142-5455
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed