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The Rise in Disability Recipiency and the Decline in Unemployment

by David H. Autor and Mark G. Duggan

WP#2002-7  

Abstract

Between 1984 and 2000, the share of non-elderly adults receiving benefits from the Social Security Disability Insurance (DI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) programs rose from 3.1 to 5.3 percent. We trace this growth to reduced screening stringency and, due to the interaction between growing wage inequality and a progressive benefits formula, a rising earnings replacement rate. We explore the implications of these changes for the level of labor force participation among the less skilled and their employment responses to adverse employment shocks. Following program liberalization in 1984, DI application and recipiency rates became two to three times as responsive to plausibly exogenous labor demand shocks. Contemporaneously, male and female high school dropouts became increasingly likely to exit the labor force rather than enter unemployment in the event of an adverse shock. The liberalization of the disability program appears to explain both facts. Accounting for the role of disability in inducing labor force exit among the low-skilled unemployed, we calculate that the U.S. unemployment rate would be two-thirds of a percentage point higher at present were it not for the liberalized disability system.

For full paper in PDF

David H. Autor is the Pentti J.K. Kouri Career Development Assistant Professor of Economics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Mark G. Duggan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Chicago. The research reported herein was supported fully by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College pursuant to a grant from the U.S. Social Security Administration funded as part of the Retirement Research Consortium.  This grant was awarded through the CRR’s Steven H. Sandell Grant Program for Junior Scholars in Retirement Research. The opinions and conclusions are solely those of the author and should not be construed as representing the opinions or policy of the Social Security Administration or any agency of the Federal Government, or the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.  We are indebted to Daron Acemoglu, Joshua Angrist, John Bound, Esther Duflo, Daniel Hamermesh, James Heckmen, Caroline Hoxby, Lawrence Katz, Steven Levitt, Sendhil Mullainathan, Sasey Mulligan, Derek Neal, and David Stapleton for numerous insightful suggestions. We thank Hung-Lin Chen, Radha Iyengar, and Liz March for superb research assistance. David Stapleton, Kalman Rupp, Charles Scott and Alan Shafer provided generous assistance with key data sources.
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