残疾人的收入:谁从创业中赚得多(少)?

Yang Yang, Mukta Kulkarni, David C. Baldridge, A. Konrad
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摘要

目的残疾人是最大和最多样化的少数群体之一,也是就业方面最不利的群体之一。创业追求通常被提倡为通往就业、包容和平等的道路,但很少有研究调查残疾人之间的收入差异。设计/方法/途径作者利用社会认知职业理论(SCCT),以及残疾人就业和创业文献,提出了关于残疾人中哪些人可能从创业中赚得更多(更少)的假设。然后,作者对加拿大残疾调查(CSD)的全国代表性样本进行了分析,包括所有从事创业的残疾人士,并将每个人与相同性别和种族、年龄和残疾严重程度相似(n≈810)的组织雇员相匹配。研究发现,对于残疾发病年龄较早、未满足住宿需求较多以及女性残疾人士而言,创业追求与他们的收入存在较强的负相关。创意/价值首先,本研究应用SCCT来帮助弥合有关残疾人士和残疾企业家在组织中就业障碍的文献。其次,我们对新自由主义关于企业家精神的逻辑提出了质疑,表明组织就业的障碍影响了企业家的追求决策,从而影响了收入。第三,我们通过研究残障属性和人口统计属性来扩展对残疾人士创业收入的理解。最后,本研究首次使用匹配样本实证检验创业追求对残疾人收入的影响。
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Earnings of persons with disabilities: Who earns more (less) from entrepreneurial pursuit?
PurposePersons with disabilities (PWD) are among the largest and most diverse minority groups and among the most disadvantaged in terms of employment. Entrepreneurial pursuit is often advocated as a path toward employment, inclusion, and equality, yet few studies have investigated earning variation among PWD.Design/methodology/approachThe authors draw on social cognitive career theory (SCCT), and the disability employment and entrepreneurship literature to develop hypotheses about who among PWD are likely to earn more (less) from entrepreneurial pursuits. The authors then conduct analyses on the nationally representative sample of the Canadian Survey on Disability (CSD) by including all PWD engaged in entrepreneurial pursuit, and matching each to an organizationally employed counterpart of the same gender and race and of similar age and disability severity (n ≈ 810).FindingsEntrepreneurial pursuit has a stronger negative association with the earnings of PWD who experience earlier disability onset ages, those who report more unmet accommodation needs, and those who are female.Originality/valueFirst, this study applies SCCT to help bridge the literature on organizational employment barriers for PWD and entrepreneurs with disabilities. Second, we call into question the logic of neoliberalism about entrepreneurship by showing that barriers to organizational employment impact entrepreneurial pursuit decisions and thereby earnings. Third, we extend the understanding of entrepreneurial earnings among PWD by examining understudied disability attributes and demographic attributes. Lastly, this study is among the first to use a matched sample to empirically test the impact of entrepreneurial pursuit on the earnings of PWD.
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