Abstract

AbstractThe article links the digital records of individual proprietors in the manuscript censuses 1851–81 for the whole of England and Wales using the BBCE database to identify career changes of employers and own account proprietors. It investigates continuing proprietorship, entry to business from previous activity, and switching out of business. The article identifies the effects on switching of demography, gender, household relationships, sector markets, and opportunity/necessity measured by location and access to railways. Previous analysis of nineteenth-century proprietor careers has been based mainly on local case studies and large firms. This article allows examination across the spectrum of small and large businesses for a representative sample large enough to generalize to the behavior of the whole population. The analysis shows a larger proportion of flows between employer, own account, and worker status than often expected, indicating a relatively open and flexible Victorian economy, and higher than in the modern United Kingdom. Farm and nonfarm activities show contrasted patterns, with farm proprietors more stable with less switching, as to be expected. Switching appears to have slowed slightly over time, with incumbency increasing for both farm and nonfarm employers, and for both men and women, but own account proprietorship was often relatively ephemeral. The article assesses the factors influencing switching using logistic regression. This confirms age, sex, marital status, family position, location, and sector as significant for explaining switching/nonswitching. The results demonstrate that although open and flexible, proprietorship was highly varied between sectors, with changes of railway accessibility mainly significant for farmers.

Highlights

  • Tracking the career steps of business proprietors offers important insights for business entry and exit, and the factors influencing those career decisions

  • This paper has shown the potential for linkage between the digital records of the nineteenth century British censuses using the I-CeM, and the British Business Census of Entrepreneurs (BBCE) database of the proprietor population

  • This allows us to demonstrate that the British Victorian economy of this period was broadly accessible and open to those seeking proprietorship opportunities

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Tracking the career steps of business proprietors offers important insights for business entry and exit, and the factors influencing those career decisions. The I-CeM-linked database of the British Business Census of Entrepreneurs (BBCE) codes those identifiable as business proprietors (Bennett et al 2019a, 2020; resources site https://www.bbce.uk/) These data are used to give the first large-scale study tracking career changes of British business proprietors using whole-population intercensus record-linkage. The linkages are used to estimate continuities in proprietor status, and the scale and rate of switching into and out of proprietorship and how this can be explained This allows exploration of questions about different life-stage choices for business entry and exit in different market conditions, responses. The paper covers England and Wales, but can in future be extended to the Scottish BBCE digital records

Theory and previous literature
For England and Wales a proportion of the records is missing
Analysis
Conclusion
Findings
59 Methods
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call