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Welfare Dependency, the Enterprise Culture and Self-Employed Survival

Robert MacDonald
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Robert MacDonald: University of Teesside

Work, Employment & Society, 1996, vol. 10, issue 3, 431-447

Abstract: New right discourses about a welfare underclass advance the idea that a significant proportion of the long-term unemployed prefer benefit dependency to working for a living. The alternative to this `dependency culture' is the `enterprise culture', the most tangible manifestation of which is the rapid growth in self-employment and the number of new, small firms in the UK over the past fifteen years. Whilst sociologists have engaged with debates abut the `underclass', surprisingly few studies have examined the motivations, values and experiences of those who appear to have moved out of `benefit dependency' into self-employed enterprise. Qualitative research explored the experiences of working-class people in Teesside who attempted to `become their own boss'. It follows the progress of `young entrepreneurs' over several years into the mid-1990s and complements this with an investigation of adults in business. The realities of survival self-employment developed in the face of permanently high rates of local unemployment do not accord with notions of an `enterprise culture', nor of a `dependency culture', but are better understood as part of a growing culture of informal and risky work.

Date: 1996
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:woemps:v:10:y:1996:i:3:p:431-447

DOI: 10.1177/0950017096103002

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