An Uneven Playing Field: The Lack of Equal Pay for People With Disabilities

Authors: Michelle Yin, Dahlia Shaewitz, & Mahlet Megra
Year: 2014  |  Type: Research Report
Published by: American Institutes for Research (AIR)
$141B
Additional GDP if Equal Pay
$25B
Federal Tax Revenue Lost
$6.5B
State Tax Revenue Lost
Master's+
Greatest Earnings Inequality

Abstract

This report provides a comprehensive analysis of the earnings gap between workers with and without disabilities across the United States. Using American Community Survey data, the study documents persistent pay inequities that widen with increasing education levels. The findings reveal that if people with disabilities earned equal pay, the U.S. GDP would increase by $141 billion, and federal and state governments would collect an additional $31.5 billion in tax revenue. The report underscores the economic costs of disability-based wage discrimination and calls for policy action to close the gap.

Key Findings

Earnings Gap by Education Level

Median earnings comparison: workers with vs. without disabilities

$60K $45K $30K $15K $0 Less than HS $20K $15K High School $28K $22K Some College $33K $25K Bachelor's $46K $35K Master's+ $57K $40K Without Disability With Disability

Economic Impact Summary

Metric Impact
Additional GDP with Equal Pay $141 billion
Lost Federal Tax Revenue $25 billion
Lost State Tax Revenue $6.5 billion
Total Lost Tax Revenue $31.5 billion
Education Level with Greatest Gap Master's degree or higher

Data & Methods

This study uses data from the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey (ACS) to analyze earnings differentials between workers with and without disabilities. The analysis examines median earnings across education levels, gender, and disability status, and estimates the macroeconomic impact of pay inequities on GDP and tax revenue using standard economic modeling approaches.

Policy Recommendations

Citation

Yin, M., Shaewitz, D., & Megra, M. (2014). An Uneven Playing Field: The Lack of Equal Pay for People With Disabilities. American Institutes for Research.

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