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Home >  Short Publications >  Health Insurance and Job Creation by the Self-Employed
Health Insurance and Job Creation by the Self-Employed
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By Aparna Mathur
Posted: Friday, August 22, 2008
PAPERS AND STUDIES
AEI Online  
Publication Date: August 22, 2008

Download file The full text of this paper is available here as an Adobe Acrobat PDF.

Surprisingly, despite all the attention devoted to the job creation attributes of small businesses, there has been an insignificant amount of research on the hiring decisions of entrepreneurs. What determines an entrepreneur's decision to employ more workers and expand the size of the business? Why do the bulk of small businesses employ less than 9 people, and why are more than 50% of small businesses sole-proprietorships with no employees? This paper is an attempt to address this issue empirically. Specifically, it highlights the role of health care regulation--health insurance mandates--on a small firm's decision to increase employment and expand the firm.

While there is general agreement that health insurance mandates affect small firms disproportionately more, there are conflicting views about whether they distort firm behavior in terms of firm's decision to offer insurance coverage to workers, reduce coverage and their impact on small firm premium costs.

Aparna Mathur is a research fellow at AEI.

Related Links
Related paper on the impact of bankruptcy law on entrepreneurship by Mathur
Related event on a national market for health insurance by Mathur
Source Notes:   This paper is forthcoming in Small Business Economics.


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