2014
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-124x.2014.12070.x
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Risk Attitudes and Self‐employment in China

Abstract: Using the 2006 wave of the Chinese General Social Survey, the present paper examines the effect of risk attitudes on the likelihood of entrepreneurship in China. Our results show that risk attitudes have a nonlinear effect on the likelihood of being entrepreneurs. Risk neutral people are most likely to be entrepreneurs, while both risk averse and risk seeking people prefer to work for wages. When we further divide entrepreneurs into necessity and opportunity entrepreneurs, we find only a marginal difference in… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
7
0

Year Published

2017
2017
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
7
1

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 24 publications
(8 citation statements)
references
References 48 publications
1
7
0
Order By: Relevance
“…At an average probability of 10.7%, this estimate represents a 35.5% increase. This finding reinforces the conclusion that risk tolerance is a strong predictor of entrepreneurship (see Ahn, 2010;Brown et al, 2006Brown et al, , 2011Caliendo et al, 2014;Fossen, 2012;Hu, 2014;Kan and Tsai, 2006;Parker, 1997;Skriabikova et al, 2014;van Praag and Cramer, 2001). Note that the coefficient is not statistically different for men and women (see the Appendix Table A5).…”
Section: Hayduk and Williamssupporting
confidence: 82%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…At an average probability of 10.7%, this estimate represents a 35.5% increase. This finding reinforces the conclusion that risk tolerance is a strong predictor of entrepreneurship (see Ahn, 2010;Brown et al, 2006Brown et al, , 2011Caliendo et al, 2014;Fossen, 2012;Hu, 2014;Kan and Tsai, 2006;Parker, 1997;Skriabikova et al, 2014;van Praag and Cramer, 2001). Note that the coefficient is not statistically different for men and women (see the Appendix Table A5).…”
Section: Hayduk and Williamssupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Finally, Ukrainian employers also discriminate against women in recruitment and go as far as requiring information about marital status and number of children in the job application. Job announcements often specify gender, even for managerial positions (see Human Rights Watch, ), and the employers preference for hiring male employees has increased substantially over time (see Coupe and Lehmann, ). It is somewhat surprising, then, that women remain less likely than men to engage in self‐employment.…”
Section: Self‐employment In Ukraine: History and Gender Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, an entrepreneurial attitude influences outcome expectations and consequently interest or disinterest in entrepreneurship (Baluku, 2017). This is supported by extant research linking entrepreneurial attitude to the choice of a career in entrepreneurship or self-employment (Baluku et al, 2018; Brachert et al, 2017; Douglas & Shepherd, 2002; Harris & Gibson, 2008; Hu, 2014). Attitudes not only predict intentions but also immediate and future entrepreneurial behaviours (Jones et al, 2011), including intention implementation, start-up actions as well as persistence in entrepreneurial activities.…”
Section: The Role Of Entrepreneurial Attitudesmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…An expressive number of countries have created programs to support entrepreneurship in their territories (Barba-Sánchez & Atienza-Sahuquillo, 2012;Ghani et al, 2014;Halabí & Lussier, 2014;Mayer-Haug et al, 2013;Obaji & Olugu, 2014;Pickernell et al, 2013;Poschke, 2013;Román et al, 2013;Slonimczyk & Gimpelson, 2015) in order to tackle informality (Castro et al, 2014;Centeno & Portes, 2006;Hu, 2014;Kus, 2014;Nguyen et al, 2014;Webb et al, 2014). Those are initiatives that, in most part, present the double target of, on one hand stimulate the development of new enterprises and, on the other, support the transition from informality to formality.…”
Section: State Informality and Entrepreneurshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Seeking to reduce the degree of the economy`s regulation, China`s a good example for, by fighting informality and seeking to stimulate the entrepreneurship, it has reduced institutional barriers (Hu, 2014). In Turkey, within the economic deterioration years, after the oil crisis of 1974, several policies were methodically implemented in order to remove market entry barriers, make international trade feasible, make labor laws more flexible, enable the access to financing and reduce taxation.…”
Section: State Informality and Entrepreneurshipmentioning
confidence: 99%