Financial constraints affect in important ways the decision of individuals to become entrepreneur (self-employed). This implicitly suggests a positive relation between the propensity of individuals to become entrepreneur and their personal wealth. Recent theoretical work and empirical evidence confirm this hypothesis. More interestingly, it has been shown that the slope of the entrepreneurship-wealth relationship increases with the extent of liquidity constraints and flattens with the magnitude of start-up costs. Using individual level data from 3 surveys (SHARE, ELSA and HRS) in Europe and the United States, as well as the World Bank’s Doing Business data, this paper empirically zeroes in on the impact of start-up costs on the self-employment-wealth relationship. The dynamic nature of the data enables us to investigate potential effects of the last global financial crisis. Results confirm the strong positive relationship between the entrepreneurial choice and wealth, as well as the negative effect stemming from the increase in start-up costs. Interestingly, although there is no strong evidence that wealth in itself played a bigger role during the crisis, we find that the negative impact of start-up costs on wealth proved to be significantly pronounced during the last crisis.

View the document

Latest Publications

2018MO-02 MO
Baromètre CIRANO 2018 - La perception des risques au Québec
Ingrid Peignier et Nathalie de Marcellis-Warin
View the document

2018s-20 WP
Long-term Care Risk Misperceptions
M. Martin Boyer, Claude Fluet, Marie-Louise Leroux, Pierre-Carl Michaud et Philippe De Donder
View the document

2018RP-11 PR
The Value of Food Certification and Labels for Consumers in Québec (Canada)
Nathalie de Marcellis-Warin, Ingrid Peignier et Yoann Guntzburger
Learn more


Center for Interuniversity Research and Analysis of Organizations
1130 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, suite 1400
Montréal, Québec (Canada) H3A 2M8
(514) 985-4000
(514) 985-4039
reception@cirano.qc.ca

© 2018 CIRANO. All rights reserved.



Partner of :