Are failed entrepreneurs penalized in the labour market? The answer is yes under certain conditions. Using a novel dataset of matched entrepreneurs and employees in Belgium, we show that: (i) on average, entrepreneurs returning to the labour market after a business failure are penalized, but this effect is most pronounced for those coming from the higher echelons of the wage distribution, and absent for those who earned relatively little before entering self-employment. (ii) the penalty is only present for entrepreneurs who fail quickly: entrepreneurs returning to the labour market after 5 or more years do not get penalized. (iii) entrepreneurs who fail fast and move to a new employer limit the wage penalty by changing industry compared to the industry they were venturing in. These results are consistent with theories of adverse selection in the labour market.
CITATION STYLE
Mahieu, J., Melillo, F., & Reichstein, T. (2018). Prior wage and the returns to entrepreneurship. In 78th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, AOM 2018. Academy of Management. https://doi.org/10.5465/AMBPP.2018.110
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