The impact of social transfers for self-employed

The impact of social transfers for self-employed

Tine Hufkens  ( Federal Public Service Social Security )  —  “The impact of social transfers for self-employed”  (joint work with: Larissa Gomes)
July 1, 2026, 0:00 am TBC TBC
Conference presentation

We examine the role of social transfers for self-employed in Belgium using the microsimulation model BELMOD. The self-employed represent a significant and increasing group in Belgium. The measurement of income from self-employment comes with particular methodological challenges and research shows that material deprivations tends to be lower for self-employed compared to employees. Despite the existing limitations we will focus on financial poverty for self-employed. The combination of microsimulation techniques and administrative data allows us to analyze which parts of the tax-benefit system contribute most to the poverty reduction for self-employed. We use administrative data and BELMOD to study the poverty reducing role of various household income sources for the self-employed in more detail. Other incomes in the household, besides the income from the individual self-employed person, reduce the poverty risk significantly. For example, the poverty risk of self-employed is reduced by more than half when taking into account labour incomes from other household members. Furthermore, it is reduced by about a third when taking into account all social benefits in the household. Our results indicate that poverty is reduced substantially by social transfers, but to a different degree for various family types. Child allowances clearly contribute to the reduction of the poverty risk for self-employed with children. For families without children, we see the largest reduction in the poverty risk for the household by pension related benefits, followed by contributory sickness/disability benefits. This work is a first step in trying to identify groups of vulnerable self-employed and assessing the role of the tax-benefit system.