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COVID-19 vaccination: lower intention and coverage among entrepreneurs compared to employees
[journal article]
Abstract Purpose: Lockdowns and the forced closure of certain industries during the COVID-19 pandemic severely impacted workers, particularly entrepreneurs, who were financially and emotionally involved in their businesses. Two studies have shown that entrepreneurs have a lower willingness to get vaccinated ... view more
Purpose: Lockdowns and the forced closure of certain industries during the COVID-19 pandemic severely impacted workers, particularly entrepreneurs, who were financially and emotionally involved in their businesses. Two studies have shown that entrepreneurs have a lower willingness to get vaccinated against COVID-19 than employees. In this study, the authors try to replicate the vaccination gap between the two groups. Second, the authors study whether the difference persists when controlling for demographics, vaccination attitudes and the COVID-19 context, including the financial impact of the pandemic, its effect on the wellbeing of workers, and government attitudes. Third, the authors study whether there are differences in how the context of the pandemic relates to vaccination willingness for entrepreneurs and employees. Design/methodology/approach: The authors conduct regression analyses using three large datasets. The authors study vaccination status (February 2022) in a 27-country Eurobarometer sample, vaccination intention (December 2020) in a Dutch sample from the LISS panel and vaccination status (July 2021) in a sample from the Understanding America Study (UAS). Findings: All datasets confirm that entrepreneurs have lower vaccination intention and coverage than employees. Even when controlling for the variables described in the LISS and UAS datasets, this negative difference remains. The study results also indicate that demographics, especially vaccination attitudes, are much more important than contextual influences in the decision to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Originality/value: The authors are the first to dive further into the vaccination differences between entrepreneurs and employees. They advise further research into the drivers of this gap, specifically relating to the role of personality and social normative influences.... view less
Keywords
contagious disease; epidemic; Eurobarometer; vaccination; attitude; employee; entrepreneur; acceptance
Classification
Health Policy
Free Keywords
Corona; COVID-19; Coronavirus; vaccination intention; vaccination status; Flash Eurobarometer 505 (Attitudes on Vaccination against Covid-19, February 2022) (ZA7869 v1.0.0)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 312-336
Journal
International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research, 29 (2023) 11
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1108/IJEBR-12-2022-1070
ISSN
1758-6534
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed