Abstract
We check on the short term if self-employment in Romania influences unemployment and vice versa. Age, education and gender characteristics treat both variables, and self-employment considers both cases with and without employees. The objective is to look at the job creation and unemployment reduction in quarterly variation during the 1999Q1–2017Q3 period. On autoregressive models, we apply the Toda and Yamamoto (1995) procedure, detailed by Giles (2011), to assess for Granger Causality. We found for unemployment rates a push effect in the self-employment rate for adults and youth with low education level to self-employment without employees’ rate for adults and self-employment with employees’ rate for old adults. We establish a ‘Schumpeter’ effect for the adult with a low level of education self-employment to unemployment, for adults’ males with tertiary education and self-employed, and older adults self-employed without employees to unemployment. We conclude that unemployment work as an inclusion mechanism for some vulnerable groups but inefficient for others. Self-employment with employees is less diversified, indicating a high-risk aversion and low start-up effect. In general, the labour market presents a unidirectional flexibility effect.
Highlights
Both unemployment and entrepreneurship phenomena are subjects for public policies which involve significant budgets
Audretsch, Braunerhjelm, and Carlsson (2012) provided empirical evidence to endogenous growth models, in that entrepreneurship is one mechanism facilitating the spillover of knowledge to research & development and human capital, thereby promoting economic growth
The refugee effect may not be true when the unemployment rate is very high There is no causality between variables, in either direction when considering longer lagged periods
Summary
Both unemployment and entrepreneurship phenomena are subjects for public policies which involve significant budgets. Active Labour Market Policies (A.L.M.P.s) point to accelerate positive transitions towards employment. Entrepreneurship programs (E.S.I. funds) spend in new competitive economic sectors’ creation, with the purpose to create new jobs. The desirable scenario is that unemployment pushes the entrepreneurship increase, and the increase of the entrepreneurship causes unemployment decrease. ILO (2019) points to the presence of ‘the phenomenon of labour market segmentation’ at the world scale. These separate submarkets or segments, distinguished by different characteristics and behavioural rules, shape various models (Jakstiene, 2010)
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