What Explains State Variation in SSDI Application Rates?

Norma B. Coe, K. Haverstick, A. Munnell, A. Webb
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引用次数: 28

Abstract

Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) applications and receipts vary greatly by state. This paper investigates the extent to which this geographic variation in SSDI applications reflects differences in health, demographics, and employment characteristics, state policies, and politics. We find that demographic, health, and employment characteristics of the state have the greatest effect on state-level variations in SSDI application rates, explaining over 70 percent of the variation. State policy concerning mandated employer-sponsored disability insurance (also known as temporary disability insurance or TDI) has a small negative effect on overall SSDI applications. This finding supports the principle underlying many recent SSDI reform plans: temporary disability insurance coverage could save the SSDI program considerable funds in the long run. Further, when we look to explain variation within a state, we find that state changes in health insurance regulation are negatively correlated with the SSDI application rate. This could be an indication that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) may have spillovers to the SSDI program.
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如何解释各州在SSDI申请率上的差异?
社会保障残疾保险(SSDI)的申请和收据因州而异。本文调查了SSDI应用中的这种地理差异在多大程度上反映了健康、人口、就业特征、国家政策和政治方面的差异。我们发现,州的人口、健康和就业特征对SSDI申请率在州一级的变化影响最大,解释了70%以上的变化。有关强制性雇主赞助的残疾保险(也称为临时残疾保险或TDI)的国家政策对总体SSDI申请有很小的负面影响。这一发现支持了最近许多社会保障计划改革计划的基本原则:从长远来看,临时残疾保险覆盖可以为社会保障计划节省大量资金。此外,当我们试图解释一个州内的变化时,我们发现健康保险监管的州变化与SSDI申请率呈负相关。这可能表明平价医疗法案(ACA)可能会对SSDI计划产生溢出效应。
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