Abstract
The persistent role of self-employment in the Japanese and Korean economies and its changing character under recent economic and industrial changes merit renewed attention to self-employment in the two countries. Using individuals’ job history data, the article compares the occupational heterogeneity of self-employment activities and stability in Japan and Korea. Korea shows a much higher prevalence of shop/restaurant owners among total self-employment than Japan, where skilled blue-collar self-employed occupy a relatively large share. The hazard models of exit from self-employment show that the overall likelihood of leaving self-employment is greater among Korean self-employed than their Japanese counterparts. In Korea, shop/restaurant owners not only comprise the majority of self-employed persons but also show a fairly high risk of exit, similar to unskilled self-employed. This pattern is contrasted to shop/restaurant owners in Japan, who show considerable stability. The study addresses how differences in the stability of self-employment between Japan and Korea are linked to different features of broader work arrangements in the two countries.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
