One Size Does Not Fit All: A New Look at the Labor Force Participation of People With Disabilities

Authors: Michelle Yin & Dahlia Shaewitz
Year: 2015  |  Type: Research Report
Published by: American Institutes for Research (AIR)
76%
Participation Without Disability
56%
Hearing Disability
50%
Vision Disability
30%
Ambulatory Disability
25%
Cognitive Disability

Abstract

This report challenges the common practice of treating people with disabilities as a single homogeneous group in labor market analyses. By disaggregating data by disability type, the study reveals dramatic differences in labor force participation rates, ranging from 56% for people with hearing disabilities to just 18% for those with self-care disabilities, compared to 76% for people without disabilities. The findings underscore the need for tailored employment policies and programs that account for the unique barriers faced by people with different types of disabilities.

Key Findings

Labor Force Participation by Disability Type

Percentage of working-age adults in the labor force

25% 50% 75% 100% No Disability 76% Hearing 56% Vision 50% Ambulatory 30% Cognitive 25% Indep. Living 20% Self-Care 18%

Participation Rate Summary

Disability Type Labor Force Participation Gap vs. No Disability
No Disability 76% --
Hearing 56% -20 pp
Vision 50% -26 pp
Ambulatory 30% -46 pp
Cognitive 25% -51 pp
Independent Living 20% -56 pp
Self-Care 18% -58 pp

Data & Methods

This study uses data from the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey (ACS) to analyze labor force participation rates among working-age adults (ages 18-64) by disability type. The ACS identifies six disability types: hearing, vision, cognitive, ambulatory, self-care, and independent living. The analysis disaggregates participation rates across these categories and compares them with the rate for people without disabilities.

Policy Recommendations

Citation

Yin, M., & Shaewitz, D. (2015). One Size Does Not Fit All: A New Look at the Labor Force Participation of People With Disabilities. American Institutes for Research.

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