Publication type
Journal Article
Author
Publication date
April 15, 2014
Summary:
It remains a puzzle as to why incapacity claims rose in many OECD countries when
life expectancy was increasing. While potentially due to hidden unemployment and policy
failure, this paper tests a further explanation: that work has become more difficult for disabled
workers. It focuses on the UK as a ‘most likely’ case, given evidence of intensification and
declining control at work. To get a more objective measure of working conditions, the models
use average working conditions in particular occupations, and impute this into the British
Household Panel Survey. The results show that people in low-control (but not high-demands)
jobs are more likely to claim incapacity benefits in the following year, a result that is robust to a
number of sensitivity analyses. Deteriorating job control seems to be a part of the explanation
for rising incapacity, and strategies to cut the number of incapacity claimants should therefore
consider ways to improve job control. Given the challenges in changing job characteristics,
however, an equally important implication is that high levels of incapacity should not just be
seen as a result of poor policies and a lack of jobs, but also as a result of the changing nature of
work.
Published in
Journal of Social Policy
Volume and page numbers
Volume: 43 , p.289 -301
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0047279413000810
ISSN
472794
Subjects
Notes
Albert Sloman Library Periodicals *restricted to Univ. Essex registered users*
#522640