No AccessPolicy Research Working Papers22 Jun 2013Heterogeneity in Subjective Wellbeing: An Application to Occupational Allocation in AfricaAuthors/Editors: Paolo Falco, William F. Maloney, Bob Rijkers, Mauricio SarriasPaolo Falco, William F. Maloney, Bob Rijkers, Mauricio Sarriashttps://doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-6244SectionsAboutPDF (1.3 MB) ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack Citations ShareFacebookTwitterLinked In Abstract:Using an extraordinarily rich panel dataset from Ghana, this paper explores the nature of self-employment and informality in developing countries through the analysis of self-reported happiness with work and life. Subjective job satisfaction measures allow assessment of the relative desirability of different jobs in ways that, conditional wage comparisons cannot. By exploiting recent advances in mixed (random parameter) ordered probit models, the distribution of subjective well-being across sectors of employment is quantified. There is little evidence for the overall inferiority of the small firm informal sector: there is not a robust average satisfaction premium for formal work vs. self-employment or informal salaried work, and owners of informal firms that employ others are on average significantly happier than workers in the formal private sector. Moreover, the estimated distribution of parameters predicting satisfaction reveal substantial heterogeneity in subjective well-being within sectors that conventional fixed parameter models, such as standard ordered probit models, cannot detect: Whatever the average satisfaction premium in a sector, all job categories contain both relatively happy and disgruntled workers. Specifically, roughly 67, 50, 40 and 59 percent prefer being a small-firm employer, sole proprietor, informal salaried, civic worker respectively, than formal work. Hence, there is a high degree of overlap in the distribution of satisfaction across sectors. The results are robust to the inclusion of fixed effects and alternate measures of satisfaction. Job characteristics, self-perceived autonomy and experimentally elicited measures of attitudes toward risk do not appear to explain these distributional patterns. Previous bookNext book FiguresReferencesRecommendedDetailsCited ByEntry and Exit: Creating Experimental Societies6 February 2019Does the Risk of Poverty Reduce Happiness?SSRN Electronic JournalEntrepreneurship Versus Joblessness: Explaining the Rise in Self-EmploymentSSRN Electronic Journal View Published: October 2012 Copyright & Permissions Related RegionsAfricaRelated TopicsMacroeconomics and Economic Growth KeywordsSUBJECTIVE WELLBEINGMIXED ORDERED PROBITSELF-EMPLOYMENTINFORMALITYDEVELOPING COUNTRYLABOR MARKETSAFRICA PDF DownloadLoading ...