by Katharine L. Bradbury
September/October 1994
During the recent recession in New England, the number of
unincorporated self-employed individuals grew while all the other
major classes of workers shrank. A shift into self-employment represents
one part of a set of changes in the mix of workers and jobs that
reflects the nature of the region’s downturn and the economic adjustments
it entailed. This article examines patterns of job and income
change for different classes of workers in New England from the
pre-recession peak year of 1988 to the recession-low year of 1992, with
an emphasis on the role of the self-employed.
Income data suggest that the self-employed fared better than the
unemployed during the recession, but their earnings declined more, on
average, than the earnings of individuals still working for other employers
in 1992. Thus, self-employment apparently represented a successful
stopgap measure, for some, to keep earning after the loss of a wage and
salary job, but typically at a lower level. A key question is the degree to
which these adjustments will be reversed as the New England economy
recovers.
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