2014
DOI: 10.1007/s12122-014-9194-4
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What Drives Self-Employment Survival for Women and Men? Evidence from Canada

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Cited by 14 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Analyzing self-employment survival of men and women in Canada, Rybczynski (2015) finds that the probability of exiting self-employment for women is increasing in the number of children below 15 years of age, but for men, the number of children has no impact on business survival.…”
Section: Self-employment Entry After Childbirthmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Analyzing self-employment survival of men and women in Canada, Rybczynski (2015) finds that the probability of exiting self-employment for women is increasing in the number of children below 15 years of age, but for men, the number of children has no impact on business survival.…”
Section: Self-employment Entry After Childbirthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many previous studies have looked at the importance of wealth or liquidity constraints, both for selfemployment entry and for success (see, e.g., HoltzEakin et al 1994;Hurst and Lusardi 2004;Rybczynski 2015;Taylor 1999). The results from these studies are somewhat mixed.…”
Section: Self-employment Entry After Childbirthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our second objective explores supply side issues regarding whether women business owners have equal access to loans, and whether this has been affected by the GFC. The broad evidence suggests that generically, women use smaller amounts of start-up capital (Fairlie and Robb, 2009;Cesaroni, Sentuti, and Buratti, 2015) and experience higher liquidity constraints in terms of income and personal wealth (Rybczynski, 2015). We would therefore, expect the GFC to have a greater influence upon access to loans which may in turn, exacerbate notions of risk and contribute to discouragement (Cowling, Liu, Minniti et al, 2016;Rostamkalaie, Nitani and Riding, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, it is not very uncommon to use old, individual-level datasets for empirical analyses. There are many studies on the Canadian labour market who have used the same data and published almost 12 years after the data period (for detail see, Ahmad, et al [39], Brouillette, et al [40], Rybczynski [41], Lightman and Gingrich [42], Bahar and Liu [43], Schuetze [44]).…”
Section: Data and Descriptive Statisticsmentioning
confidence: 99%