• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: The economics of disability
  • Contributor: Salkever, David S. [Hrsg.]; Sorkin, Alan L. [Hrsg.]
  • imprint: Bingley, U.K: Emerald, 2000
    Online-Ausg.
  • Published in: Research in human capital and development ; 13
    Emerald insight
  • Extent: Online-Ressource
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1016/s0194-3960(2000)13
  • ISBN: 9781849500319
  • Identifier:
  • RVK notation: QV 220 : Allgemeines
  • Keywords: Behinderte ; Behinderte Arbeitskräfte ; Erwerbsminderungsrente ; Arbeitsmarkt ; USA ; Business & Economics Labor ; Labour economics ; Disability: social aspects ; People with disabilities Employment United States ; Vocational rehabilitation United States ; People with disabilities Government policy United States ; People with disabilities ; Employment ; United States ; Vocational rehabilitation ; United States ; People with disabilities ; Government policy ; United States ; Business & Economics ; Labor
  • Type of reproduction: Online-Ausg.
  • Reproduction note: Online-Ausg
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Three important issues have recently attracted researchers to study the economics of disability. First with the availability of sophisticated data sets, it has become possible to conduct highly quantative investigations of the relative economic impacts of various types of disabling health problems. Second, the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1991, and the subsequent implementation of its employment provisions, focused national attention on the continuing scarcity of employment opportunities for disabled persons. The tools of analysis that have been developed over the past several decades to study racial and gender discrimination in labor markets are applied in this book to study the experiences of persons with disabilities.Third, the past several decades have witnessed a rapid growth in the public and private costs of disability support programs. Many economists recognize the need to design such programs that would provide continued economic security, without the work disincentives, high budgetary costs, and efficiency losses of existing programs. A major purpose of this volume is to bring together empirical studies dealing with all three of the above issues in a single volume. By doing this we can illustrate the breadth of current research in the field and allow the reader to see the connections and common threads that underlie this scope of concerns and research objectives

    Introduction / David S. Salkever, Alan Sorkin -- The relationship between labor market outcomes and physical and mental health exogenous human capital or endogenous health production? / Susan L. Ettner -- Within group structural tests of labor-market discrimination : a study of persons with serious disabilities / David S. Salkever, Marisa Elena Domino -- The changing economic status of disabled women, 1982-1991 : trends and their determinants / Robert Haveman, Karen Holden, Barbara Wolfe, Paul Smith, Kathryn Wilson -- Behavioral responses to changes in disability policy : the role of measured limitation on inferences / Brent Kreider -- Empirical models of employees' disabilities due to injury : return-to-work outcome and claim duration under private long-term disability insurance / David S. Salkever, Judith Shinogle, Mohankumar Purushothaman -- Will expanding health care coverage for people with disabilities increase their employment and earnings? : evidence from an analysis of the SSI work incentive program / David C. Stapleton, Adam F. Tucker -- The labor market effects of mental illness : the case of affective disorders / Dave E. Marcotte, Virginia Wilcox-G(c)·ok, D.Patrick Redmon -- Syndromal effects of psychiatric disorders on labor force exits / Eric P. Slade, Leigh Ann Albers -- The role of disability in the study of job loss and reemployment probabilities / Stephanie Bernell. - Three important issues have recently attracted researchers to study the economics of disability. First with the availability of sophisticated data sets, it has become possible to conduct highly quantative investigations of the relative economic impacts of various types of disabling health problems. Second, the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1991, and the subsequent implementation of its employment provisions, focused national attention on the continuing scarcity of employment opportunities for disabled persons. The tools of analysis that have been developed over the past several decades to study racial and gender discrimination in labor markets are applied in this book to study the experiences of persons with disabilities.Third, the past several decades have witnessed a rapid growth in the public and private costs of disability support programs. Many economists recognize the need to design such programs that would provide continued economic security, without the work disincentives, high budgetary costs, and efficiency losses of existing programs. A major purpose of this volume is to bring together empirical studies dealing with all three of the above issues in a single volume. By doing this we can illustrate the breadth of current research in the field and allow the reader to see the connections and common threads that underlie this scope of concerns and research objectives