PARENTS, PARTNERS, AND CREDENTIALS: SELF-EMPLOYMENT MOBILITY IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY
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Published:2003
Patricia A McManus, 2003. "PARENTS, PARTNERS, AND CREDENTIALS: SELF-EMPLOYMENT MOBILITY IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY", Inequality Across Societies: Familes, Schools and Persisting Stratification, David Baker, Bruce Fuller, Emily Hannum, Regina Werum
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This research compares the effects of career credentials and family factors on self-employment careers in the United States and Western Germany. In Germany, both general education and vocational credentials structure self-employment, primarily at entry. In the United States, general education alone structures self-employment, primarily by stabilizing the self-employment careers of workers with higher credentials. Intergenerational transmission of self-employment is more prominent among men, while spousal transmission of self-employment status is more prominent among women. In the United States, but not in Germany, there is evidence of a “caretaker” pathway that brings mothers of young children into self-employment for short periods of time.
