Heterogeneous self-employment and subjective well-being: evidence from Latin America Cortés Aguilar, Alexandra García-Muñoz, Teresa Moro Egido, Ana Isabel Labor informality Voluntary us involuntary self-employment Life a job satisfaction This paper analyzes the relationship between labor status and individual satisfaction in Latin America. Existing evidence for developed countries shows that the self-employed report higher job satisfaction than the employed. The evidence, however, is less conclusive in terms of lifesatisfaction. Moreover, for Latin American countries, the evidence shows that self-employed individuals report lower life-satisfaction than employed individuals do. To clarify the effect of selfemployment on satisfaction, we use the Latinobarómetro survey 2007 for eighteen Latin American and Caribbean countries, considering the category self-employment as a heterogeneous category. Additionally, we control for the distinction between necessity and opportunity self-employed. Contrary to existing evidence, we find that not all self-employed individuals are more satisfied than employed individuals. Specifically, we find evidence revealing that, compared to workers in paid employment (i) precarious self-employed workers are as satisfied as the employed with their life but less with job and household income; (ii) self-employed professionals are more satisfied than the employed only with their incomes; (iii) business owners are more satisfied with their lives, income and job; and (iv) self-employed famers and fisherman are less satisfied with their jobs and income. 2014-05-06T10:00:02Z 2014-05-06T10:00:02Z 2013-06 info:eu-repo/semantics/report Cortés Aguilar, A.; García-Muñoz, T.; Moro-Egido, A. Heterogeneous self-employment and subjective well-being: evidence from Latin America. Universidad de Granada. Departamento de Teoría e Historia Económica (2013). (The Papers; 13/05). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/31586] http://hdl.handle.net/10481/31586 eng The Papers;13/05 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License Universidad de Granada. Departamento de Teoría e Historia Económica