Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Series: Tinbergen Institute Discussion Papers Creation-Date: 1999-11-18 Number: 99-089/3 Author-Name: Niels G. Noorderhaven Author-Workplace-Name: Tilburg University Author-Name: Sander Wennekers Author-Workplace-Name: EIM, Zoetermeer Author-Name: Geert Hofstede Author-Workplace-Name: EIM, Zoetermeer Author-Name: A. Roy Thurik Author-Workplace-Name: Erasmus University Rotterdam Author-Name: Ralph E. Wildeman Author-Workplace-Name: Tilburg University Title: Self-Employment out of Dissatisfaction: An International Study Abstract: This paper studies differences in the rate of self-employment (business ownership) in more thantwenty Western nations and Japan for the period 1974-1994, focusing in particular on theinfluences of dissatisfaction and uncertainty avoidance. We test two types of hypotheses, pertainingto the positive influence of various forms of dissatisfaction on the level of self-employment, and todifferences between the importance of various push and pull factors in low and high uncertaintyavoidance countries. The two types of hypotheses are related, as inhabitants of high-uncertaintyavoidance cultures tend to express lower levels of satisfaction with life. Using a longitudinaldataset covering 12 European countries, and controlling for important economic factors, we findthat dissatisfaction is a very important variable for explaining differences in self-employmentlevels. Dissatisfaction seems to be a factor promoting self-employment, not only at the level of theindividual, but also at the level of societies. Hofstede's Uncertainty Avoidance Index is used todistinguish between low and high-uncertainty avoidance countries, and the factors influencingselfemployment rates within these two clusters are investigated in a set of 23 countries. In the group ofhigh-uncertainty avoidance countries a strong negative relationship between GDP per capita andthe level of self-employment is found, in low-uncertainty avoidance countries the profits associatedwith being self-employed are a significant factor. These findings, which support the hypotheses,suggest that in high-uncertainty avoidance countries self-employment is often caused by a lack ofprosperity (a push factor); in low-uncertainty avoiding countries the pull factor of expected profitsis more important. File-Url: https://papers.tinbergen.nl/99089.pdf File-Format: application/pdf File-Size: 76800 bytes Handle: RePEc:tin:wpaper:19990089