Social Security may be failing well over a million people with disabilities
The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.
The big idea
More than half of
The
I think it's fair to say that if a disability benefit is truly available to those who need it, then a large portion of people with work-limiting disabilities should actually receive the aid.
To learn if that is true for the disability programs, I analyzed data over time from a long-running survey of adults older than age 50 called the Health and Retirement Study. The survey included information on disabilities and finances for tens of thousands of people from across the country and was linked to disability benefit records from the
The data showed that the share of people with substantial work-limiting disabilities who received
Using the most recent Census data, I estimate that more than half of those with work-limiting disabilities between the ages of 50-64 — about 1.35 million people — likely need these benefits but aren't getting them.
I also examined the generosity of disability benefits in the
I found that those receiving benefits, and particularly Supplemental Security Income, struggled more and experienced less financial security than their peers.
Why it matters
Nearly a quarter of
Many will look for financial support from
The Supplemental Security Income program, established in 1972, pays cash benefits to adults and children who also meet the definition of disability and who have financial need. The maximum payment as of 2023 was
My research suggests that well over 1 million people with disabilities who face substantial barriers to employment are not getting the assistance they need. But what's more, even those who receive benefits are likely not getting enough. Past research shows that more than 20% of
What still isn't known
This research looked at data from 2016 and earlier, but a lot has changed since then.
Chronic understaffing at benefit offices — long-running but worse since the COVID-19 pandemic began — are making benefits harder to get at a time of growing need. An estimated 500,000 people are experiencing disabilities as a result of long COVID. And those experiencing it report having even more trouble receiving benefits.
So the problem is probably worse today.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a



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