Occupational choice in early industrializing societies: Experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial work

As low-income countries industrialize, workers choose between informal self-employment and low-skill manufacturing. What do workers trade off, and what are the long run impacts of this occupational choice? Self-employment is thought to be volatile and risky, but to provide autonomy and flexibility....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Blattman, C, Dercon, S
Format: Working paper
Published: National Bureau of Economic Research 2016
_version_ 1797060474799390720
author Blattman, C
Dercon, S
author_facet Blattman, C
Dercon, S
author_sort Blattman, C
collection OXFORD
description As low-income countries industrialize, workers choose between informal self-employment and low-skill manufacturing. What do workers trade off, and what are the long run impacts of this occupational choice? Self-employment is thought to be volatile and risky, but to provide autonomy and flexibility. Industrial firms are criticized for poor wages and working conditions, but they could offer steady hours among other advantages. We worked with five Ethiopian industrial firms to randomize entry-level applicants to one of three treatment arms: an industrial job offer; a control group; or an “entrepreneurship” program of $300 plus business training. We followed the sample over a year. Industrial jobs offered more hours than the control group’s informal opportunities, but had little impact on incomes due to lower wages. Most applicants quit the sector quickly, finding industrial jobs unpleasant and risky. Indeed, serious health problems rose one percentage point for every month of industrial work. Applicants seem to understand the risks, but took the industrial work temporarily while searching for better work. Meanwhile, the entrepreneurship program stimulated self-employment, raised earnings by 33%, provided steady work hours, and halved the likelihood of taking an industrial job in future. Overall, when the barriers to self-employment were relieved, applicants appear to have preferred entrepreneurial to industrial labor.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:17:39Z
format Working paper
id oxford-uuid:2caf91e5-0a07-4125-ac1a-4d494b4af256
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T20:17:39Z
publishDate 2016
publisher National Bureau of Economic Research
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:2caf91e5-0a07-4125-ac1a-4d494b4af2562022-03-26T12:38:40ZOccupational choice in early industrializing societies: Experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial workWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:2caf91e5-0a07-4125-ac1a-4d494b4af256Symplectic Elements at OxfordNational Bureau of Economic Research2016Blattman, CDercon, SAs low-income countries industrialize, workers choose between informal self-employment and low-skill manufacturing. What do workers trade off, and what are the long run impacts of this occupational choice? Self-employment is thought to be volatile and risky, but to provide autonomy and flexibility. Industrial firms are criticized for poor wages and working conditions, but they could offer steady hours among other advantages. We worked with five Ethiopian industrial firms to randomize entry-level applicants to one of three treatment arms: an industrial job offer; a control group; or an “entrepreneurship” program of $300 plus business training. We followed the sample over a year. Industrial jobs offered more hours than the control group’s informal opportunities, but had little impact on incomes due to lower wages. Most applicants quit the sector quickly, finding industrial jobs unpleasant and risky. Indeed, serious health problems rose one percentage point for every month of industrial work. Applicants seem to understand the risks, but took the industrial work temporarily while searching for better work. Meanwhile, the entrepreneurship program stimulated self-employment, raised earnings by 33%, provided steady work hours, and halved the likelihood of taking an industrial job in future. Overall, when the barriers to self-employment were relieved, applicants appear to have preferred entrepreneurial to industrial labor.
spellingShingle Blattman, C
Dercon, S
Occupational choice in early industrializing societies: Experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial work
title Occupational choice in early industrializing societies: Experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial work
title_full Occupational choice in early industrializing societies: Experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial work
title_fullStr Occupational choice in early industrializing societies: Experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial work
title_full_unstemmed Occupational choice in early industrializing societies: Experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial work
title_short Occupational choice in early industrializing societies: Experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial work
title_sort occupational choice in early industrializing societies experimental evidence on the income and health effects of industrial and entrepreneurial work
work_keys_str_mv AT blattmanc occupationalchoiceinearlyindustrializingsocietiesexperimentalevidenceontheincomeandhealtheffectsofindustrialandentrepreneurialwork
AT dercons occupationalchoiceinearlyindustrializingsocietiesexperimentalevidenceontheincomeandhealtheffectsofindustrialandentrepreneurialwork