
















Fields:
Entrepreneurship, Public Finance.
Job Market Paper:
"Self-Employment does not measure Entrepreneurship"
Abstract: This paper uses two newly
assembled datasets to demonstrate that the common practice of relying on
self-employment to proxy for entrepreneurship often gives to rise to misleading inference. I determine the
source of wealth of all billionaires listed on Forbes Magazine's list, identifying 996 individuals in over fifty
countries who became rich by founding new firms.
Using these individuals to define the per capita rate of entrepreneurship, I show that entrepreneurship rates correlate
negatively with self-employment rates. Countries with higher income, lower taxes and less regulation have higher
entrepreneurship rates but less self-employment. I attempt to account for these results theoretically using a model
where efficient financial markets and a favorable policy environment lead to a better allocation of capital to talent,
raising wages, and thereby driving the least productive self-employed individuals to seek employment.
This evidence is supplemented with data from a recently administered survey of 12,000 Swedish twins. The survey
asks individuals to identify as self-employed or entrepreneurs based on their intentions to innovate and grow
their businesses. Whilst the self-employed have lower incomes than employees with similar characteristics,
entrepreneurs have higher incomes. These relationships hold both in the cross-section and within family.
References:
Raaj Sah, Kerwin Charles and Robert Lalonde.
Tino Sanandaji,
Ph.D. Candidate in Public Policy 2010