Disability and disadvantage: selection, onset and duration effects

Jenkins, S. P.ORCID logo & Rigg, J. A. (2003). Disability and disadvantage: selection, onset and duration effects. (CASEpaper 74). Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion.
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This paper analyses the economic disadvantage experienced by disabled persons of working-age using data from the British Household Panel Survey. We argue that there are three sources of disadvantage among disabled persons: pre-existing disadvantage among those who become disabled (a ¿selection¿ effect), the effect of disability onset itself, and the effects associated with remaining disabled post-onset. We show that employment rates fall with disability onset, and continue to fall the longer a disability spell lasts, whereas average income falls sharply with onset but then recovers subsequently (though not to pre-onset levels).

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