Persistence in Self-Employment Rates before the Great Lockdown: The Case of the UK
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Abstract
A growing body of empirical literature—both on the micro and macro scale—is devoted to
exploring the existence of hysteresis—or at least persistence—in self-employment, i.e., whether policy,
economic or external shocks have transitory or persistent effects on the probability of survival, and in
turn, on the natural rate of self-employment. In aggregate time series studies, the usual method to
address this issue has been to look for unit roots by using alternative tests or by using unobservable
components models. In this research, we performed a battery of tests and competing approaches to
check the robustness of our results with UK self-employment time series. The UK is a suitable case
for study because the recent evolution of the UK self-employment rate figures shows a steady growth
since the beginning of the millennium. This long-term rise in UK self-employment has attracted
the attention of scholars, at least, before the Great Lockdown. We find evidence of hysteresis, while
business cycle output variations significantly affect self-employment rates. The article discusses
the implications of the findings.
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Bibliographic citation
López Pérez, E., Rodríguez Santiago, A., & Congregado Ramírez de Aguilera, E. (2020). Persistence in Self-Employment Rates before the Great Lockdown: The Case of the UK. Sustainability, 12(16), 6429. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166429














