325 lines
11 KiB
YAML
325 lines
11 KiB
YAML
abstract: 'Recent years have shown rapid and profound changes in work organization
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and job content, materialized in new schemes of economic and labor
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nature, such as the increasingly common outsourcing or subcontracting of
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workforce. This trend has contributed to the emergence of dependent
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self-employed workers, who perform their work responsibilities in a
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``gray area{''''} between paid and self-employment. The concept of
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``dependent self-employed{''''} has also been used to label several labor
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practices or new forms of precarious freelance or professional
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activities, and although the terminology may vary, it is a clear and
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well-known reality in Europe. Despite this fact, there seems to be
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little empirical evidence about its specific characteristics and
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nuances.
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The present work aims to study the main labor characteristics of
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dependent self-employed workers-individuals with civil or commercial
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contracts who perform their economic activities depending on or
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integrated into the company they work for-in the current context of the
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European Union; to this end, a comparative analysis is conducted to
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differentiate or associate the profiles of three collectives: salaried
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employees, and dependent and traditional self-employed workers.
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Additionally, working conditions of the three groups considered are
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examined in order to show the specific particularities between them.
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The initial premise is intended to face the two groups of self-employed
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workers to elucidate whether such advantages remain or disappear for
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dependent self-employed subjects. After an initial bivariate analysis,
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the working conditions of the three groups under investigation have been
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compared in pairs: salaried employees, and dependents (false)
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self-employed and and non-dependent (traditional) self-employed workers.
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The statistical approach used to fulfill the objectives of this work is
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based on the binary logistic regression model, a particular regression
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models with dichotomous response. This statistical technique allows the
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development of a logit model to study the probability of the occurrence
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of an investigated event -e.g. being part of the autonomous
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collective-versus the probability of occurrence of the opposite event
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-e.g. being hire as a salaried employee-, according to a set of
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variables that bibliographic review has identified as related to the
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phenomenon under analysis: individual characteristics, organizational
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factors, and attitudinal variables.
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It had been used a sample of 2409 subjects has been obtained from the
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fifth European Survey on Working Conditions and broken down into three
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groups: dependent self-employed, independent self-employed, and salaried
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workers. The results point out that there is a common core in terms of
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those factors that discriminate between self-employed workers and
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jobholders; however, there are some nuances that distinguish and define
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each group of self-employed individuals with regard to salaried
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employees. In comparison to wage employment, self-employment presents
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more precarious extrinsic working conditions - kind of working day, type
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of economic activity, level of income, etc.- which are compensated, to
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some extent, by certain elements of intrinsic reward such as greater
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flexibility or the content of work itself.
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Three logistic regression models are proposed to identify the profile of
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self-employed subjects both false and traditional-from salaried
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employees, as well as to compare the working conditions of self-employed
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workers with each other. So first, we confront the two types of
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self-employed workers with salaried employees. When comparing both, it
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is observed that there is a common core with regard to the factors that
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differentiate between the self-employed workers and salaried employees:
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among the former, part-time occupations are more frequent, which does
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not prevent them from working more hours a week, even at weekend,
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although they enjoy more flexibility in deciding their working schedule;
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they are also less likely to work in shifts and have greater autonomy
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over the content of their economic activities compared to salaried
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employees. Finally, agricultural work is more common among self-employed
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people, as well as receiving lower remunerations.
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The weekly work hours of false self-employed subjects are higher than
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those of the salaried job-holders, while they are more likely to be
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forced to work on the weekend and less to do shift works. In addition,
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the probability for a false self-employed subject to earn below average
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income is almost triple than that of a salaried employee. This
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vulnerable position is partly amended by the presence of other elements
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of intrinsic compensation that dependent self-employed workers - in
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contrast to wage jobholders-enjoy, such as more flexibility in deciding
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their working hours or a greater autonomy over the content of their
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occupational activity. These workers provide their services more
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frequently in the construction and, above all, agricultural sector.
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Finally, despite the precariousness of their working conditions, false
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self-employed people are much more involved with their occupations than
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those employed by others. All these results are significant at the 1\%
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level; for this level of significance, the logistic regression model
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indicates that the rest of the variables, that have independently showed
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a significant relationship with the type of work, no longer bear it when
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it comes to evaluating its overall impact.
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Besides that, we compare non-dependent self-employed subjects with
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salaried employees, incorporates two personal variables so that the
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former are more likely to be older men than the latter. As regards
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working conditions, non-dependent self-employed people work more
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part-time, as well as many more hours a week and even at weekends, which
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is associated with lower monthly incomes than those paid to salaried
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employees. Model 3 establishes a comparison between the two types of
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self-employed workers. The profile of a false self-employed subject
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happens to be a woman who performs a ``blue-collar{''''} job for a smaller
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number of hours per week than that completed by the non-dependent
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self-employed ones, and with a lower income as well. What is more, the
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component of time flexibility and autonomy over the occupational
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activities disappears among the false self-employed people when
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comparing to the rest of self-employed workers. Similarly, the
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probability for a dependent self-employed subject to work in the
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agriculture sector is more than double than that of a non-dependent
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self-employed one. Despite the situation, the only actitudinal variable
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that differentiates both groups is the lower degree of job stress shown
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by false self-employed people. False self-employed workers constitute a
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collective of great interest to the labor market. Many companies began
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to resort to this figure in the hardest years of the crisis, justifying
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it as a lesser evil. However, some of these firms have ended up
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implementing this kind of external recruitement as a regular practice; a
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labor strategy oriented towards saving costs. More often than desirable,
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false self-employed workers perform the same activity as their peers
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with contracts, but lack the rights stated in the labor law for salaried
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employees. In spite of this circumstance, empirical research on
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dependent self-employed people is very limited given the opacity that
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characterizes the collective. On the one hand, problems of conceptual
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precision make it difficult to discern in some instances who or who is
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not a false self-employed subject. On the other hand, the very situation
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of vulnerability in which these people find themselves causes
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complications for a researcher to obtain reliable and unbiased
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information. Nonetheless, it is less common for non-dependent
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self-employed to work shift or night shift. In spite of this
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circumstance, empirical research on dependent self-employed people is
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very limited given the opacity that characterizes the collective.
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Problems of conceptual precision make it difficult to discern in some
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instances who or who is not a false self-employed subject and the very
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situation of vulnerability in which these people find themselves causes
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complications for a researcher to obtain reliable and unbiased
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information. Managerial changes have to be focused on the individuals
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and the values that might help them progress to a new organizational
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culture where the delegation of authority, open communication systems,
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participation, collaboration, and continuous learning - among
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others-prevail. This ideal scenario is clouded by the use of
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outsourcing, sometimes even fraudulent, as an instrument to circumvent
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conventional and legal employment contracts. The paradox is that other
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forces could unbalance the alleged savings attributable to the use of
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these new forms of work organization.
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By incorporating new rules to the occupational arena, which smear the
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organizational board where labor relations within the company are
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settled, the virus of distrust is inoculated among workers, both those
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who are subjected to the coercion of dependent self-employment and those
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who remain in the company being suspicious that they can be selected and
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reorganized as well at any time. This process irreversibly contaminates
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the values on which workers sustain their daily behavior, affecting in
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one way or another the business competitiveness.'
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affiliation: 'Navajas-Romero, V (Corresponding Author), Univ Cordoba, Cordoba, Spain.
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Navajas-Romero, Virginia, Univ Cordoba, Cordoba, Spain.
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Carmen Lopez-Martin, Ma; Ariza-Montes, Antonio, Univ Loyola Andalucia, Seville,
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Spain.'
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author: Navajas-Romero, Virginia and Carmen Lopez-Martin, Ma and Ariza-Montes, Antonio
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author-email: mclopez@uloyola.es
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author_list:
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- family: Navajas-Romero
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given: Virginia
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- family: Carmen Lopez-Martin
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given: Ma
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- family: Ariza-Montes
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given: Antonio
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da: '2023-09-28'
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doi: 10.7203/CIRIEC-E.89.10008
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eissn: 1989-6816
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files: []
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issn: 0213-8093
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journal: CIRIEC-ESPANA REVISTA DE ECONOMIA PUBLICA SOCIAL Y COOPERATIVA
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keywords: 'Self-employed worker; dependent self-employed worker; working
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conditions; salaried workers; binary logistic regression'
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keywords-plus: JOB-SATISFACTION; ENTREPRENEURSHIP; CHALLENGES
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language: Spanish
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month: APR
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number-of-cited-references: '73'
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orcid-numbers: 'Ariza-Montes, Antonio/0000-0002-5921-0753
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Navajas-Romero, Virginia/0000-0001-7381-8071'
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pages: 167-198
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papis_id: 770f66e83abbb97124852b9b8ad194b5
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ref: Navajasromero2017dependentselfemploye
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researcherid-numbers: 'Lopez-Martin, M Carmen/HKV-2043-2023
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Ariza-Montes, Antonio/G-8882-2017
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'
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times-cited: '3'
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title: Dependent self-employed workers in Europe
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type: article
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unique-id: WOS:000427094400007
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usage-count-last-180-days: '1'
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usage-count-since-2013: '40'
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volume: '89'
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web-of-science-categories: Economics
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year: '2017'
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