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Entrepreneurship as a Career : An investigation into the pre-entrepreneurship antecedents and post-entrepreneurship outcomes among the Science and Technology Labor Force (STLF) in Sweden

Sundriyal, Vivek Kumar LU (2019)
Abstract
This dissertation provides a career perspective on entrepreneurship based on the research question: “How do organizational bureaucracy and relative income affect the career choice of entrepreneurship among employees from the science and technology labor force (STLF); and what are the career outcomes in terms of returns during, and post entrepreneurship on re-entry into paid employment?” More specifically, the dissertation investigates (1) how mobility into entrepreneurship versus switching jobs is influenced by the level of bureaucracy in the organization and individual’s relative income compared to similar individuals and (2) how labor market returns after a period in entrepreneurship are influenced by the duration and number of prior... (More)
This dissertation provides a career perspective on entrepreneurship based on the research question: “How do organizational bureaucracy and relative income affect the career choice of entrepreneurship among employees from the science and technology labor force (STLF); and what are the career outcomes in terms of returns during, and post entrepreneurship on re-entry into paid employment?” More specifically, the dissertation investigates (1) how mobility into entrepreneurship versus switching jobs is influenced by the level of bureaucracy in the organization and individual’s relative income compared to similar individuals and (2) how labor market returns after a period in entrepreneurship are influenced by the duration and number of prior spells in entrepreneurship, as well as the level of bureaucracy in the employer organization prior to and after entrepreneurship. Based on a matched employer-employee dataset (1990-2008) provided by Statistics Sweden, the results suggest that organizational bureaucracy and income inequality markedly influence an employee’s career choice of entrepreneurship versus a job switch, as well the initial income and entry size in entrepreneurship. Additionally, the results indicate that the returns from entrepreneurship on re-entry into paid employment differ based on the number of years in entrepreneurship, number of spells in entrepreneurship, the employer bureaucracy prior to entry into entrepreneurship, and employer bureaucracy on re-entry into paid employment. The dissertation contributes to the research on entrepreneurial careers, entrepreneurial entry, and the returns from entrepreneurship. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Professor Rider, Christopher I., University of Michigan
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
entrepreneurial entry, science and technology labor force, incorporated entrepreneurship, careers, bureaucracy, income inequality, returns from entrepreneurship, panel data, quantitative methods
pages
276 pages
publisher
Lund
defense location
Crafoordsalen
defense date
2019-11-04 13:15:00
ISBN
978-91-7895-278-6
978-91-7895-279-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7368fbe5-e306-447a-8065-ce2dc180180b
date added to LUP
2019-10-01 10:14:36
date last changed
2023-06-19 11:00:39
@phdthesis{7368fbe5-e306-447a-8065-ce2dc180180b,
  abstract     = {{This dissertation provides a career perspective on entrepreneurship based on the research question: “How do organizational bureaucracy and relative income affect the career choice of entrepreneurship among employees from the science and technology labor force (STLF); and what are the career outcomes in terms of returns during, and post entrepreneurship on re-entry into paid employment?” More specifically, the dissertation investigates (1) how mobility into entrepreneurship versus switching jobs is influenced by the level of bureaucracy in the organization and individual’s relative income compared to similar individuals and (2) how labor market returns after a period in entrepreneurship are influenced by the duration and number of prior spells in entrepreneurship, as well as the level of bureaucracy in the employer organization prior to and after entrepreneurship. Based on a matched employer-employee dataset (1990-2008) provided by Statistics Sweden, the results suggest that organizational bureaucracy and income inequality markedly influence an employee’s career choice of entrepreneurship versus a job switch, as well the initial income and entry size in entrepreneurship. Additionally, the results indicate that the returns from entrepreneurship on re-entry into paid employment differ based on the number of years in entrepreneurship, number of spells in entrepreneurship, the employer bureaucracy prior to entry into entrepreneurship, and employer bureaucracy on re-entry into paid employment. The dissertation contributes to the research on entrepreneurial careers, entrepreneurial entry, and the returns from entrepreneurship.}},
  author       = {{Sundriyal, Vivek Kumar}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7895-278-6}},
  keywords     = {{entrepreneurial entry; science and technology labor force; incorporated entrepreneurship; careers; bureaucracy; income inequality; returns from entrepreneurship; panel data; quantitative methods}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  publisher    = {{Lund}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Entrepreneurship as a Career : An investigation into the pre-entrepreneurship antecedents and post-entrepreneurship outcomes among the Science and Technology Labor Force (STLF) in Sweden}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/70217048/opponent_ex_e_nailing_ex_vivek.pdf}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}