Zarifa David, Walters David, Seward Brad
Nipissing University.
University of Guelph.
Can Rev Sociol. 2015 Nov;52(4):343-76. doi: 10.1111/cars.12082.
Canada's fear of future skill and labor shortages has brought youth with disabilities to the forefront of public policy. Many universities are now reporting that an increased proportion of their graduating students identify as having a disability, and as a result, educational achievement-based programs designed to accommodate students' needs are growing across campuses. Despite recent attention by policymakers on improving accessibility standards and increasing employer incentives, young Canadians with disabilities continue to face barriers in their transitions to the workforce. The nature and extent of the early workforce inequalities faced by postsecondary graduates with disabilities remains unclear. This paper draws on the 2005 cohort of Statistics Canada's National Graduates Survey to examine the early workforce outcomes of postsecondary graduates with disabilities. Contrary to theories of human capital, the results reveal significant earnings gaps between graduates with and without disabilities of various fields of study and levels of schooling. Further, graduates with a disability are even more disadvantaged in terms of securing employment, as they were significantly less likely to be employed full-time, and were overrepresented among unemployed and part-time workers across various fields of study and levels of postsecondary education.
加拿大对未来技能和劳动力短缺的担忧使残疾青年成为公共政策的焦点。现在许多大学报告称,其毕业学生中认定自己有残疾的比例有所增加,因此,旨在满足学生需求的基于教育成就的项目在各校园不断增加。尽管政策制定者最近关注提高无障碍标准并增加雇主激励措施,但加拿大残疾青年在向劳动力市场过渡时仍面临障碍。残疾高等院校毕业生早期面临的劳动力不平等的性质和程度仍不明确。本文利用加拿大统计局2005年全国毕业生调查队列,研究残疾高等院校毕业生的早期劳动力市场结果。与人力资本理论相反,结果显示,不同学习领域和教育水平的残疾毕业生与非残疾毕业生之间存在显著的收入差距。此外,残疾毕业生在就业方面更加不利,因为他们全职就业的可能性明显更低,在各个学习领域和高等教育水平的失业者和兼职工人中所占比例过高。