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Did Problems with SSDI Cause the Output-Jobs Disconnect?

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  • Greg Hannsgen

Abstract

The slow recovery of the job market after the recessions of 2001 and 2007–09 has fostered concerns that the link between output growth and job creation has been severed. Between 2000 and 2010, the employment rate for males plunged from 71.9 to 63.7 percent—a decline that can be accounted for almost entirely by a fall in the employment rate for the disabled members of this group. Research Scholar Greg Hannsgen examines whether the Great Recession disproportionately affected the job prospects of disabled workers, and whether the long-run fall in employment among the disabled can be blamed largely on the design of Social Security disability insurance. His findings? At least since 2008, the ongoing fall in the probability of being employed has strongly affected the job prospects of both the disabled and the nondisabled, and the accelerated declines since 2007 hint at an important, and negative, role for the recent recession. Hence, a government jobs initiative such as an employer-of-last-resort program, and not just long-term improvements in entitlement programs, is still very much apropos.

Suggested Citation

  • Greg Hannsgen, 2011. "Did Problems with SSDI Cause the Output-Jobs Disconnect?," Economics One-Pager Archive op_9, Levy Economics Institute.
  • Handle: RePEc:lev:levyop:op_9
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