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劳动年龄人口的残疾福利覆盖范围及项目互动

Disability benefit coverage and program interactions in the working-age population.

作者信息

Rupp Kalman, Davies Paul S, Strand Alexander

机构信息

Division of Policy Evaluation, Office of Research, Evaluation, and Statistics, Office of Retirement and Disability Policy, Social Security Administration, USA.

出版信息

Soc Secur Bull. 2008;68(1):1-30.

Abstract

Over three-fourths of the working-age population in the United States is insured for Disability Insurance (DI); this group is protected against a total loss of earned income typically associated with severe disability. However, little is known about the role the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program plays in protecting against the financial consequences of severe disability for this population. We find that over one-third (36 percent) of the working-age population is covered by SSI in the event of a severe disability. Three important implications follow, which we discuss in sequence below: (1) SSI increases the overall coverage of the working-age population; (2) SSI enhances the bundle of cash benefits available to disabled individuals; and (3) interactions with other programs also enhance the safety net, most notably in the area of health insurance coverage. Ignoring these implications could lead to inaccurate inferences about disability program coverage, health insurance coverage, and the well-being of working-age individuals with disabilities. The first major finding is that SSI substantially increases overall cash benefit coverage. Thus SSI dramatically increases protection against the financial risk of disablement in the working-age population. While roughly 23 percent of the U.S. working-age population was not insured for DI in November 1996, SSI provides coverage for more than half of this seemingly "uncovered" population. An important innovation of our analysis is that we account for the possibility that many of those who appear ineligible for SSI based on current income could become eligible as a result of a disability shock that causes their earnings to drop. Thus the estimated proportion that is protected by SSI increases when the possibility of earnings loss because of disability is considered. Considering DI and SSI together, roughly 90 percent of the working-age population would be potentially covered for benefits in the event of a disability. Those who are covered by SSI--as opposed to those covered by DI alone-tend to be relatively young, less educated, and in relatively poor health. The remaining 10 percent or so are not covered by either DI or SSI. This group is economically vulnerable in some sense (they are poorer, older, and more likely to be women than those covered only by DI), but they are not as economically vulnerable in terms of income, resource holdings, and private health insurance coverage as those who are eligible for SSI. A disproportionate share of those who are not covered by either DI or SSI consists of married women. The second major finding is that SSI substantially enhances the bundle of available cash benefits. Roughly one-third of those covered by DI are initially covered by SSI as well. SSI enhances the bundle of available cash benefits through two mechanisms: (1) SSI provides cash payments during the 5-month DI waiting period, and (2) SSI supplements the DI benefit after the DI waiting period for people whose initial SSI payment is larger than the DI benefit. We find that the role of SSI cash payments is temporary for most of those who are initially covered by both SSI and DI: They would receive SSI during the DI waiting period, but would lose SSI eligibility afterwards because the higher DI benefit completely offsets the SSI benefit. However, a smaller group of DI beneficiaries with low DI benefit levels would continue to be covered by both SSI and DI after the DI waiting period because the relatively low DI benefit would not completely offset the SSI benefit. The third major finding is that interactions with other programs also substantially enhance the safety net. The most important interactions involve health insurance coverage. In the working-age population, Medicare is available to DI beneficiaries, but only after a 24-month waiting period. By contrast, SSI is an important pathway to Medicaid benefits for severely disabled adults with limited income and resources and has no waiting period. SSI can provide a pathway to health insurance coverage during the 24-month Medicare waiting period for some DI beneficiaries through providing access to Medicaid. Interactions with other programs, such as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), Food Stamp, Unemployment Insurance (UI), workers' compensation (WC), and veterans' disability programs, modify the role of DI and SSI in protecting people against the adverse financial effects of disablement. The nature of the interactions with other programs differs depending on individual circumstances. Employment-related programs (including UI, WC, and veteran's disability programs) are particularly important for those who are covered by DI. By contrast, the means-tested programs (including TANF and Food Stamp) are more important for those who would be eligible for SSI. In conclusion, SSI plays a substantial role in protecting working-age people against the adverse financial consequences of disablement through three mechanisms: (1) providing coverage to many who are not DI insured; (2) providing additional cash benefits to many who are DI insured and also covered by SSI; and (3) enhancing the social safety net by interacting with other programs, most notably Medicaid. Through these mechanisms, the role of SSI is substantial enough that it cannot be safely ignored in econometric and policy research on DI.

摘要

美国超过四分之三的工作年龄人口享有伤残保险(DI);这一群体可防范通常与严重残疾相关的劳动收入完全损失。然而,对于补充保障收入(SSI)计划在保护这一群体免受严重残疾带来的经济后果方面所起的作用,我们却知之甚少。我们发现,超过三分之一(36%)的工作年龄人口在遭遇严重残疾时可获得SSI的保障。由此产生三个重要影响,我们将在下文依次讨论:(1)SSI提高了工作年龄人口的总体保障覆盖率;(2)SSI增加了残疾人士可获得的现金福利组合;(3)与其他计划的相互作用也加强了安全网,在医疗保险覆盖领域尤为显著。忽视这些影响可能会导致对残疾计划覆盖范围、医疗保险覆盖范围以及工作年龄残疾人士福祉的推断不准确。第一个主要发现是,SSI大幅提高了总体现金福利覆盖率。因此,SSI极大地增强了对工作年龄人口残疾财务风险的防范能力。虽然在1996年11月,约23%的美国工作年龄人口未享有DI保障,但SSI为这一看似“未覆盖到”的人口中的一半以上提供了保障。我们分析的一项重要创新在于,我们考虑到了这样一种可能性:许多基于当前收入看似不符合SSI资格的人,可能会因残疾冲击导致收入下降而符合资格。因此,当考虑到因残疾导致收入损失的可能性时,受SSI保护的估计比例会增加。将DI和SSI综合考虑,在发生残疾时,约90%的工作年龄人口可能会获得福利保障。那些受SSI保障的人——与仅受DI保障的人相比——往往相对年轻、受教育程度较低且健康状况相对较差。其余约10%的人既未受DI保障也未受SSI保障。这一群体在某种意义上经济较为脆弱(他们比仅受DI保障的人更贫穷、年龄更大且更可能是女性),但就收入、资源持有和私人医疗保险覆盖情况而言,他们不像符合SSI资格的人那样经济脆弱。在既未受DI保障也未受SSI保障的人群中,已婚女性占比过高。第二个主要发现是,SSI大幅增加了可获得的现金福利组合。约三分之一受DI保障的人最初也受SSI保障。SSI通过两种机制增加了可获得的现金福利组合:(1)在DI的5个月等待期内提供现金支付;(2)对于初始SSI支付高于DI福利的人,在DI等待期过后,SSI补充DI福利。我们发现,对于大多数最初同时受SSI和DI保障的人来说,SSI现金支付的作用是暂时的:他们在DI等待期内会领取SSI,但之后会失去SSI资格,因为较高的DI福利完全抵消了SSI福利。然而,一小部分DI福利水平较低的受益人在DI等待期过后仍将继续同时受SSI和DI保障,因为相对较低的DI福利无法完全抵消SSI福利。第三个主要发现是,与其他计划的相互作用也大幅加强了安全网。最重要的相互作用涉及医疗保险覆盖。在工作年龄人口中,DI受益人可享受医疗保险,但需等待24个月。相比之下,SSI是收入和资源有限的重度残疾成年人获得医疗补助福利的重要途径,且无需等待期。通过提供获得医疗补助的途径,SSI可以在24个月的医疗保险等待期内为一些DI受益人提供医疗保险覆盖途径。与其他计划的相互作用,如对有需要家庭的临时援助(TANF)、食品券、失业保险(UI)、工伤赔偿(WC)和退伍军人残疾计划,改变了DI和SSI在保护人们免受残疾不利经济影响方面的作用。与其他计划相互作用的性质因个人情况而异。与就业相关的计划(包括UI、WC和退伍军人残疾计划)对受DI保障的人尤为重要。相比之下,经过经济状况调查的计划(包括TANF和食品券)对符合SSI资格的人更为重要。总之,SSI通过三种机制在保护工作年龄人口免受残疾带来的不利经济后果方面发挥了重要作用:(1)为许多未受DI保障的人提供保障;(2)为许多受DI保障且也受SSI保障的人提供额外现金福利;(3)通过与其他计划,尤其是医疗补助计划的相互作用加强社会安全网。通过这些机制,SSI的作用足够显著,以至于在关于DI的计量经济学和政策研究中不能被安全地忽视。

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