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Title

Immigrant Self-Employment: Testing Hypotheses About the Role of Origin- and Host-Country Human Capital and Bonding and Bridging Social Capital.

Authors

Kanas, Agnieszka; van Tubergen, Frank; van der Lippe, Tanja

Abstract

Using large-scale data on immigrants in the Netherlands, the authors tested competing arguments about the role of origin- and host-country human capital and bonding and bridging social capital in immigrants' self-employment. When taking job-skill level into account, immigrants with a higher level of origin- and destination-country education are less likely to be self-employed than salary employed. Likewise, the likelihood of self-employment decreases with origin-country work experience but not with host-country work experience. The presumed positive effect of bonding social capital is not found, but this study's results suggest that immigrants with an access to bridging social capital are more likely to be self-employed than those without such contacts.

Subjects

NETHERLANDS; IMMIGRANTS; SELF-employment; HUMAN capital; INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics); JOB skills; FOREIGN workers; FREELANCERS

Publication

Work & Occupations, 2009, Vol 36, Issue 3, p181

ISSN

0730-8884

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1177/0730888409340128

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