欧洲个体经营者中的贫困和物质剥夺:对一个相对未知的景观的探索

Jeroen Horemans, I. Marx
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引用次数: 13

摘要

在工作方面,贫穷已成为欧洲一个紧迫的社会问题。在这种情况下,个体经营者仍然是一个相对未知的领域。欧洲约有15%的工人从事自营职业,这一群体不能再被忽视,特别是自雇在许多国家呈上升趋势,尤其是自营职业。利用欧盟- silc的数据,本文提供了欧洲联盟自营职业者的贫困和生活水平的系统绘图工作。我们发现,欧洲的个体经营者普遍面临着比合同工更高的收入贫困风险。更详细地研究个体户收入贫困的驱动因素,我们发现,除了较低的报告收入外,家庭层面较低的整体工作强度似乎是一个重要的驱动因素。然而,虽然自营职业者的收入贫困程度相当严重,但物质剥夺率一般要低得多。个体经营者的收入贫困指标和物质匮乏指标之间的差异要比雇员大得多。一种可能的解释是,自雇人士可以更多地利用在生命周期中积累的资产或他们控制的商业资产。自雇人士构成了劳动力的一个非常复杂的部分,群体内部的不平等相当严重。一个特别容易陷入贫困的群体是自营工人,这让人们对这种形式的自营职业的崛起感到担忧。虽然本文提供了广泛的描述性分析和一些试探性的解释,一个重要的和相当大的研究议程仍然存在。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Poverty and Material Deprivation Among the Self-Employed in Europe: An Exploration of a Relatively Uncharted Landscape
In work-poverty has become a pressing social issue in Europe. The self-employed remain relatively uncharted terrain in this context. With about 15 percent of European workers in self-employment this group can no longer be ignored, especially since self-employment is on the rise in many countries, particularly own-account self-employment. Drawing on EU-SILC data this paper provides a systematic mapping exercise of poverty and living standards among the self-employed in the European Union. We find that the self-employed in Europe generally face significantly higher income poverty risks than contracted workers. Looking in more detail at the drivers of income poverty among the self-employed we find that in addition to lower reported earnings, lower overall work-intensity at the household level appears to be an important driver. However, while income poverty levels are quite significant among the self-employed, material deprivation rates are generally much lower. The discrepancy between income poverty measures and material deprivation measures is much larger for the self-employed than it is for employees. One possible explanation is that the self-employed can more often draw on assets accumulated over the life cycle or on business assets they control. The self-employed constitute a very mixed segment of the workforce and within-group inequality is quite significant. One group emerges as being particularly at-risk of poverty are own-account workers, substantiating worries about the rise of this form of self-employment. While the paper offers extensive descriptive analysis and some tentative explanations, an important and sizable research agenda remains.
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