Kennedy L D
Soc Secur Bull. 2000;63(3):34-46.
Disabling conditions previously considered to be permanent and total are no longer viewed as automatic barriers to work. Medical advances, improved accommodations in the workplace, and changes in the nature of work for the working disabled have allowed many disabled people to rejoin the workforce. The Social Security Administration (SSA) has followed those developments with a view toward encouraging people receiving disability benefits to consider returning to work. To effectively target SSA's efforts and evaluate their success, information about previous work histories of the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) beneficiary population is used to provide baseline data. This article examines the earnings histories of 300,000 disabled SSI beneficiaries--one of the populations targeted by the expanded work-incentive measure under Public Law 106-70--who were working in December 1997. The article also investigates whether beneficiaries who are working have significant lifetime earnings and whether earnings patterns exist that might assist with SSA's work-support activities. SSI program records were matched to data in the Master Earnings File to explore the characteristics and earnings patterns before and after a person applies for benefits. The article addresses several questions: What are the general characteristics of disabled SSI beneficiaries? What are their earnings histories? Did they have an earnings record when they applied for SSI? Of the SSI beneficiaries working in December 1997, most tended to be younger than other disabled beneficiaries, to have some sort of mental disability, and to have earnings well below levels that would suggest their eventual, complete independence from the SSI cash benefits program. A look at past covered earnings revealed that the vast majority of SSI workers had a history of earnings before they applied for SSI benefits. Despite their severe impairments and age at the time of first eligibility, nearly 40 percent had earnings in 11 years or more. The amounts of those earnings were quite low, however, and were usually not high enough to preclude SSI eligibility. Examining the years immediately before and after the point of application indicated whether recent pre-application earnings were consistent with post-application return to work. Results were a bit surprising. They revealed that one-third of the 1997 SSI workers had no earnings, and another 28 percent returned to work despite having no earnings in the 4-year period before application. Persons receiving SSI because of mental retardation seemed to have poorer earnings histories than other workers but were more likely to return to work after application. That may be explained by their younger ages or may reflect the outside assistance they received in responding to SSA work incentives.
以前被认为是永久性和完全性的致残状况不再被视为工作的自动障碍。医学进步、工作场所更好的便利设施以及残疾劳动者工作性质的变化,使得许多残疾人能够重新回到劳动力队伍中。社会保障管理局(SSA)关注着这些发展情况,旨在鼓励领取残疾福利的人考虑重返工作岗位。为了有效地确定SSA的工作重点并评估其成效,有关补充保障收入(SSI)受益人群以往工作经历的信息被用作提供基线数据。本文研究了30万名残疾SSI受益人的收入历史——这些人是《公法106 - 70》中扩大的工作激励措施所针对的人群之一——他们在1997年12月仍在工作。本文还调查了仍在工作的受益人是否有可观的终身收入,以及是否存在有助于SSA开展工作支持活动的收入模式。将SSI项目记录与主收入文件中的数据进行匹配,以探究人们申请福利前后的特征和收入模式。本文探讨了几个问题:残疾SSI受益人的一般特征是什么?他们的收入历史是怎样的?他们申请SSI时是否有收入记录?在1997年12月仍在工作的SSI受益人中,大多数往往比其他残疾受益人更年轻,患有某种精神残疾,且收入远低于表明他们最终能完全独立于SSI现金福利项目的水平。查看过去涵盖的收入情况发现,绝大多数SSI劳动者在申请SSI福利之前就有收入历史。尽管他们在首次符合资格时存在严重残疾且年龄较大,但近40%的人在11年或更长时间里有收入。然而,这些收入数额相当低,通常不足以排除其符合SSI资格的可能性。研究申请前后的年份表明,近期申请前的收入与申请后重返工作岗位的情况是否一致。结果有点令人惊讶。结果显示,1997年仍在工作的SSI劳动者中有三分之一没有收入,另有28%的人尽管在申请前的4年里没有收入,但仍重返了工作岗位。因智力迟钝而领取SSI的人似乎比其他劳动者的收入历史更差,但申请后更有可能重返工作岗位。这可能是因为他们年龄较小,也可能反映了他们在响应SSA工作激励措施时获得的外部援助。