Rising Poverty in the Midst of Plenty: The Case of Working- Age People with Disabilities Richard V. Burkhauser Department of Policy Analysis and Management Cornell University Andrew J. Houtenville Industrial and Labor Relations Cornell University Ludmila Rovba Analysis Group, Inc. Montreal, Canada Partial funding for the work reported in this paper came from the United States Department of Education, National Institute of Disability and Rehabilitation Research, cooperative agreement No This paper does not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institute of Disability and Rehabilitation Research.
“When you can not measure, your knowledge is meager and unsatisfactory”—Lord Kelvin. (Chiseled on the archway of the University of Chicago Social Science Building)
Six questions this talk will answer with respect to working-age people with disabilities: What was their poverty rate in 2004? How sensitive is this measure across data sets and definitions of the population? What is their relative risk of poverty? How has their relative risk of poverty changed over the last two major business cycles? What explains these changes in their poverty rate (compositional changes or underlying changes)? How has the compositionally adjusted change in their relative risk of poverty changed?
Figure 1: Median Family Income and Poverty Rate of Families and Persons,
Table 1. Relative Poverty Risk for Selected Economically Vulnerable Working-Aged Populations Year Total Population (Aged 25-61) Female/ Male Ratio Non- White/ White Ratio With/Without Work Limitation Ratio
Table 2: Estimated Disability Prevalence Rates for Working-Age People with Disabilities (Men and Women, Aged 25 to 61), By Data Source Participation Restriction Activity LimitationImpairment Overall EmploymentIADLSelf-CareMentalPhysicalSensory Disability Prevalence Rates ACS, CPS, March NA CPS, March NA Matched CPS 2003 and NA
Table 2: Estimated Disability Poverty Rates for Working-Age People with Disabilities (Men and Women, Aged 25 to 61), By Data Source Participation Restriction Activity LimitationImpairment Overall EmploymentIADLSelf-CareMentalPhysicalSensory Poverty Prevalence Rates ACS, CPS, March NA CPS, March NA Matched CPS 2003 and NA
Table 3: Relative Poverty Risk of Those With Disabilities by Sex, Education, Race, and Age Ratio All Men Women Education: < High School Education: High School Education: > High School White Nonwhite Age: Age:
Table 4: Decomposition of the Percentage Point Change in Poverty Rate of Those Reporting Work Limitation, by Changes in Absolute Population Shares Contribution to Change in the Overall Poverty Rate Percentage Point Population Share Poverty RateTotal Population Share Poverty RateTotal Total Population
Table 5: Actual and Compositionally Adjusted Poverty Rates for Working-Age People With and Without Disabilities Actual Poverty Poverty Adjusted for Composition (1983 base) Actual Poverty Poverty Adjusted for Composition (1993 base) Poverty Adjusted for Composition (1983 base) With Disabilities Without Disabilities Ratio (relative poverty)
Figure 2. Trends in the Ratio of Actual and Compositionally Adjusted Relative Poverty Rates of People With Work Limitations,
Conclusions The compositionally adjusted poverty rate of working- age people with disabilities has grown over time. Their compositionally adjusted relative risk of poverty has grown even more over time. OMB should choose a method of capturing poverty rate levels and trends of working-age people by disability status. Those interested in tracking their economic well-being should find a way to link longer-term CPS-based trends to those found with better data as it becomes available.