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Disability benefit growth and disability reform in the US: lessons from other OECD nations

TLDR
In this paper, the authors describe the factors driving unsustainable DI program growth in the U.S., show their similarity to the factors that led to unsustainable growth in these other four OECD countries, and discuss the reforms each country implemented to regain control over their cash transfer disability program.
Abstract
Unsustainable growth in program costs and beneficiaries, together with a growing recognition that even people with severe impairments can work, led to fundamental disability policy reforms in the Netherlands, Sweden, and Great Britain. In Australia, rapid growth in disability recipiency led to more modest reforms. Here we describe the factors driving unsustainable DI program growth in the U.S., show their similarity to the factors that led to unsustainable growth in these other four OECD countries, and discuss the reforms each country implemented to regain control over their cash transfer disability program. Although each country took a unique path to making and implementing fundamental reforms, shared lessons emerge from their experiences. JEL codes: J14, J18

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Journal ArticleDOI

Economic, Labor, and Regulatory Moderators of the Effect of Individual Placement and Support Among People With Severe Mental Illness: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

TL;DR: The significant competitive-employment rate advantage of IPS over control services increased in the presence of weaker employment protection legislation and integration efforts, and less generous disability benefits.
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Sickness and disability policies: Reform paths in OECD countries between 1990 and 2014

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the effects of sickness and disability policies for the working-age population in a number of OECD countries, between the years 1990 and 2014, and found that there has been a broad shift in focus from passive income maintenance to employment incentives and reintegration policies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protecting Working-Age People with Disabilities: Experiences of Four Industrialized Nations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the evolution of disability programs in four countries: Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United States, and show how growth in the receipt of publically provided disability benefits has fluctuated over time and discuss how policy choices played a role.
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Labour Market Integration and Equality for Disabled People: A Comparative Analysis of Nordic and Baltic Countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the employment situation of disabled people, and disability policies, in three Nordic and three Baltic countries (Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania) were considered.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in U.S. Wage Inequality: Revising the Revisionists

TL;DR: This paper found that the slowing of the growth of overall wage inequality in the 1990s hides a divergence in the paths of upper-tail (90/50) inequality and lower-tail inequality, even adjusting for changes in labor force composition.
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The Rise in the Disability Rolls and the Decline in Unemployment

TL;DR: This article found that between 1984 and 2001, the share of nonelderly adults receiving Social Security Disability Insurance income (DI) rose by 60 percent to 5.3 million beneficiaries, due to reduced screening stringency, declining demand for less skilled workers, and an unforeseen increase in the earnings replacement rate.
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The Impact of Economic Conditions on Participation in Disability Programs: Evidence from the Coal Boom and Bust

TL;DR: These shocks provide clear evidence that as the value of labor-market participation increases, disability program participation falls, and the relationship between economic conditions and program participation is much stronger for permanent than for transitory economic shocks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Growth in the Social Security Disability Rolls: A Fiscal Crisis Unfolding

TL;DR: The U.S. Social Security Disability Insurance (DI) program has grown dramatically over the last 20 years in size and expense as discussed by the authors, and this growth poses significant risks to the finances of the DI program and the broader Social Security system, and raises troubling questions as to whether the program is being misused by claimants.
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