@techreport{f5b3991808ba4059b6a4304dc303631f,
title = "Testing the differential impact of COVID-19 on self-employed women and men in the United Kingdom",
abstract = "This paper investigates whether the female self-employed are more affected by the COVID- 19 crisis than the male self-employed using longitudinal data four months following the first {\textquoteleft}lockdown{\textquoteright} in the UK. We specifically test the role of family/social, economic and psychological factors on gendered differential impact. We find that self-employment exits are not gendered but women are more likely to experience reductions in hours worked and earnings. This greater adverse impact on women{\textquoteright}s working hours and earnings is despite family responsibilities and home-schooling, industrial gender segregation and women{\textquoteright}s greater propensity to run a non-employing business and to work part-time. However, lower attitude to risk in women is associated with lower risk of reduction in earnings. Policy needs to look beyond business exits when considering crisis support for the self-employed.",
keywords = "pandemic, economic impact, gender",
author = "Darja Reuschke and Andrew Henley and Elizabeth Daniel and \{Price Victoria\}, Sian",
year = "2021",
month = mar,
day = "30",
doi = "10.2139/ssrn.3813643",
language = "English",
series = "IZA discussion papers",
publisher = "IZA – Institute of Labor Economics",
number = "14216",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "IZA – Institute of Labor Economics",
}