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The Happiness of Being Self-Employed: A Function of Personality Traits or Procedural Utility? Thomas Lange Bournemouth University Business School.

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Presentation on theme: "The Happiness of Being Self-Employed: A Function of Personality Traits or Procedural Utility? Thomas Lange Bournemouth University Business School."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Happiness of Being Self-Employed: A Function of Personality Traits or Procedural Utility? Thomas Lange Bournemouth University Business School

2 Motivation The self-employed enjoy greater job satisfaction than salaried employees. Why? –Studies in the economics discourse pay particular attention to greater freedom and autonomy. Economists generally consider it less likely that personality traits may drive the utility difference between self-employed and employed workers. Interestingly, variables on personality traits are rarely explicitly taken into account. –Research in the management and psychology literature suggests that entrepreneurial satisfaction may depend, at least in part, on specific personal values and personality traits.

3 Previous findings Early work (Schumpeter 1934; Super 1953) Contemporary studies: –Success and achievement motivation –Low risk aversion –Optimism, confidence, depression –Creativity  ‘personality traits’ –Independence –Autonomy –Ability to influence organisational events  ‘procedural utility’

4 Data 2006 European Social Survey –Cross-sectional –Covers responses from 25 European countries –Approx. 2,000 individuals per country –Information on job satisfaction (ordinal, categorical; scale 0 – 10) and various socio-demographic characteristics –Also (!): information on respondents’ levels of optimism, self- confidence, depression, and a range of personal values and beliefs –By excluding countries with missing information on the main variables of interest, the analysis is restricted to 19 countries –Workers in full-time employment; focus on individuals aged 18 – 65 years of age –Effective sample: 11,157 observations – 6,282 for male and 4,875 for female workers

5 Results (1): some basic cross-tabulations

6 Results (2): ordered probit regressions

7 Results (3): ordered probit (contd.)

8 Concluding remarks The empirical analysis shows the following: –A number of demographic variables impact on workers’ well being –It confirmed psychologists’ assertions that several personality traits serve as strong predictors of workers’ job satisfaction –However, controlling for these traits does not alter the statistical significance of a strong and positive association between self- employment and job satisfaction –In contrast, adding variables on autonomy and procedural freedom to the regressions results in strong mediating effects: the sign of the self-employment coefficient remains positive, but is no longer statistically significant at the conventional levels. –The findings add further strength to economists’ argument: net of demographics, values and personality traits, autonomy and independence are the key mechanisms by which self- employment leads to higher levels of job satisfaction.


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