TY - JOUR
T1 - The right stuff? Personality and entrepreneurship
AU - Hamilton, Barton H.
AU - Papageorge, Nicholas W.
AU - Pande, Nidhi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019 The Authors.
PY - 2019/5
Y1 - 2019/5
N2 - We construct a structural model of entry into self-employment to evaluate the impact of policies supporting entrepreneurship. Previous work has recognized that workers may opt for self-employment due to the nonpecuniary benefits of running a business and not necessarily because they are good at it. Other literature has examined how socio-emotional skills, such as personality traits, affect selection into self-employment. We link these two lines of inquiry. The model we estimate captures three factors that affect selection into self-employment: credit constraints, relative earnings, and preferences. We incorporate personality traits by allowing them to affect sector-specific earnings as well as preferences. The estimated model reveals that the personality traits that make entrepreneurship profitable are not always the same traits driving people to open a business. This has important consequences for entrepreneurship policies. For example, subsidies for small businesses do not attract talented-but-reluctant entrepreneurs, but instead attract individuals with personality traits associated with strong preferences for running a business and low-quality business ideas.
AB - We construct a structural model of entry into self-employment to evaluate the impact of policies supporting entrepreneurship. Previous work has recognized that workers may opt for self-employment due to the nonpecuniary benefits of running a business and not necessarily because they are good at it. Other literature has examined how socio-emotional skills, such as personality traits, affect selection into self-employment. We link these two lines of inquiry. The model we estimate captures three factors that affect selection into self-employment: credit constraints, relative earnings, and preferences. We incorporate personality traits by allowing them to affect sector-specific earnings as well as preferences. The estimated model reveals that the personality traits that make entrepreneurship profitable are not always the same traits driving people to open a business. This has important consequences for entrepreneurship policies. For example, subsidies for small businesses do not attract talented-but-reluctant entrepreneurs, but instead attract individuals with personality traits associated with strong preferences for running a business and low-quality business ideas.
KW - Entrepreneurship
KW - latent factors
KW - personality
KW - socioemotional skills
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85065428411&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3982/QE748
DO - 10.3982/QE748
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85065428411
SN - 1759-7323
VL - 10
SP - 643
EP - 691
JO - Quantitative Economics
JF - Quantitative Economics
IS - 2
ER -