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Men Find Careers in Collecting Disability
Townhall.com ^ | December 3, 2012 | Michael Barone

Posted on 12/03/2012 4:18:35 AM PST by Kaslin

Americans are very generous to people with disabilities. Since passage of the Americans With Disabilities Act in 1990, millions of public and private dollars have been spent on curb cuts, bus lifts and special elevators.

The idea has been to enable people with disabilities to live and work with the same ease as others, as they make their way forward in life. I feel sure the large majority of Americans are pleased that we are doing this.

But there is another federal program for people with disabilities that has had an unhappier effect. This is the disability insurance (DI) program, which is part of Social Security.

The idea is to provide income for those whose health makes them unable to work. For many years, it was a small and inexpensive program that few people or politicians paid much attention to.

In his recent book, "A Nation of Takers: America's Entitlement Epidemic," my American Enterprise Institute colleague Nicholas Eberstadt has shown how DI has grown in recent years.

In 1960, some 455,000 workers were receiving disability payments. In 2011, the number was 8,600,000. In 1960, the percentage of the economically active 18-to-64 population receiving disability benefits was 0.65 percent. In 2010, it was 5.6 percent.

Some four decades ago, when I was a law clerk to a federal judge, I had occasion to read briefs in cases appealing denial of disability benefits. The Social Security Administration then seemed pretty strict in denying benefits in dubious cases. The courts were not much more openhanded.

Things have changed. Americans have grown healthier, and significantly lower numbers die before 65 than was the case a half-century ago. Nevertheless, the disability rolls have ballooned.

One reason is that the government seems to have gotten more openhanded with those claiming vague ailments. Eberstadt points out that in 1960, only one-fifth of disability benefits went to those with "mood disorders" and "muscoskeletal" problems. In 2011, nearly half of those on disability voiced such complaints.

"It is exceptionally difficult -- for all practical purposes, impossible," writes Eberstadt, "for a medical professional to disprove a patient's claim that he or she is suffering from sad feelings or back pain."

In other words, many people are gaming or defrauding the system. This includes not only disability recipients but health care professionals, lawyers and others who run ads promising to get you disability benefits.

Between 1996 and 2011, the private sector generated 8.8 million new jobs, and 4.1 million people entered the disability rolls.

The ratio of disability cases to new jobs has been even worse during the sluggish recovery from the 2007-09 recession. Between January 2010 and December 2011, there were 1,730,000 new jobs and 790,000 new people collecting disability.

This is not just a matter of laid-off workers in their 50s or early 60s qualifying for disability in the years before they become eligible for Social Security old age benefits.

In 2011, 15 percent of disability recipients were in their 30s or early 40s. Concludes Eberstadt, "Collecting disability is an increasingly important profession in America these says."

Disability insurance is no longer a small program. The government transfers some $130 billion obtained from taxpayers or borrowed from purchasers of Treasury bonds to disability beneficiaries every year.

But there is also a human cost. Consider the plight of someone who at some level knows he can work but decides to collect disability payments instead.

That person is not likely to ever seek work again, especially if the sluggish recovery turns out to be the new normal.

He may be gleeful that he was able to game the system or just grimly determined to get what he can in a tough situation. But he will not be able to get the satisfaction of earned success from honest work that contributes something to society and the economy.

I use the masculine pronoun intentionally, because an increasing number of American men have dropped out of the workforce altogether. In 1948, 89 percent of men age 20 and over were in the workforce.

In 2011, 73 percent were. Only a small amount of that change results from an aging population. Jobs have become physically less grueling and economically more rewarding than they were in 1948.

The Americans With Disabilities Act helped many people move forward and contribute to society. The explosive growth of disability insurance has had an opposite effect.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: disability; disabilityact
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To: Kaslin

btt


61 posted on 12/03/2012 9:28:23 AM PST by dennisw (With age comes wisdom.)
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To: Darnright

“OBAMAFOME!”
“CRAZY CHECK!”


62 posted on 12/03/2012 9:29:24 AM PST by MrB (The difference between a Humanist and a Satanist - the latter admits whom he's working for)
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To: The Working Man; unsychophant

I’m glad to see some others disagreeing with Barone’s line about this abuse being a “man thing”. I have seen at least as many women who are gaming the disability system.


63 posted on 12/03/2012 9:40:18 AM PST by AFPhys ((Praying for our troops, our citizens, that the Bible and Freedom become basis of the US law again))
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To: Graybeard58

You have to have worked to collect Social Security Disability too

Not true, look up the SSI-SSP program.


64 posted on 12/03/2012 9:55:29 AM PST by sheana
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To: sheana
Not true, look up the SSI-SSP program.

S.S.S. and Social Security Disability are two totally different things.

True- You must have paid in to S.S.D.I. to collect, you need never have paid in a cent to collect S.S.I.

65 posted on 12/03/2012 12:39:26 PM PST by Graybeard58 (What G.O.P.e. candidate is in store for us in 2016?)
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To: sheana
Not true, look up the SSI-SSP program.

S.S.I. and Social Security Disability are two totally different things.

True- You must have paid in to S.S.D.I. to collect, you need never have paid in a cent to collect S.S.I.

66 posted on 12/03/2012 12:39:50 PM PST by Graybeard58 (What G.O.P.e. candidate is in store for us in 2016?)
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To: redgolum

Women are as big of beneficiaries of Affirmative Action as minorites are. Environmentalists killed manufacturing, among other male oriented occupations, such as construction of same facilites.


67 posted on 12/03/2012 4:58:45 PM PST by wrencher
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To: The Working Man

Lets see, it’s the feminist’s fault that men won’t work, because they pushed them. Or something. The feminists disabled you...


68 posted on 12/03/2012 6:53:20 PM PST by Mamzelle
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To: riverrunner

About a year ago...I went back home to Alabama for a week. My brother took time out to identify the various locals on disability. He ran through about fifteen names. After a while, with questions, I came to realize that all of them carrying on various hobbies or part-time jobs where the disability business doesn’t affect them at all. There’s one local guy who has been disabled since his mid-20s (he started out in the late 1970s)...and still collects it today, while doing various part-time jobs on the side.


69 posted on 12/03/2012 6:57:02 PM PST by pepsionice
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