Teenagers who are troublemakers may go on to become successful entrepreneurs, if a new study is to be believed.
Many successful entrepreneurs exhibited aggressive behaviour and got in trouble as teenagers, an international team of researchers found.
Researchers Ross Levine of Berkeley's Haas Economic Analysis and Policy Group and Yona Rubinstein from the London School of Economics, found that entrepreneurs are identifiable not only by their earning potential, but also by certain character traits that appear throughout their youth, 'BusinessNewsDaily' reported.
More From This Section
"Our data revealed that many successful entrepreneurs exhibited aggressive behaviour and got in trouble as teenagers," Levine said.
"This is the person who wasn't afraid to break the rules, take things by force or even be involved in minor drugs," he said.
The study found that young people who possessed these trouble-making qualities went on to become high-earning salaried workers. And when opening their own businesses, they made 70 per cent more money than they ever had as employees.
"What we find is that a particular constellation of traits turns out to be a strong predictor of who is going to become an entrepreneur later in life and whether that person is going to be a high-earner when he or she launches a business," Levine said.
The University of California, Berkeley study, which focused on debunking the myth that entrepreneurship does not pay off for most, found that entrepreneurs actually earn about 50 per cent more than their salaried counterparts working in the same industry with the same level of education.