What Have We Learned Using Merged Administrative Data from the Social Security Administration and the Rehabilitation Services Administration?

What Have We Learned Using Merged Administrative Data from the Social Security Administration and the Rehabilitation Services Administration?

Published: Feb 21, 2017
Publisher: Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation, vol. 46, no. 2, How Individual and Environmental Factors affect Employment Outcomes, edited by Purvi Sevak, David C. Stapleton and John O’Neill

Background

Policy makers have substantial interest in how the provision of employment services to persons with disabilities affects earnings and receipt of disability benefits.

Objective

We examined the extent to which studies using matched Social Security Administration (SSA) and Rehabilitation Services Administration (RSA) data inform how provision of employment services affects employment and benefit outcomes.

Methods

We summarize each study and consider the extent to which the findings address the effects of service provision on employment and benefit outcomes.

Results

The studies provide rich contextual information about how enrollment for services is related to employment and disability program outcomes but limited evidence regarding impacts. Positive relationships between service and outcomes may confound the impacts of services with effects of other factors, such as the unobserved severity of medical conditions, motivation, or strength of the local labor market. Two studies that attempted to rigorously estimate the impacts of employment services found convincing evidence of impacts on service enrollment but no evidence of impacts on employment and benefit outcomes.

Conclusions

RSA-SSA data can facilitate estimation of employment service impacts, but to differentiate impacts from effects of confounding factors, researchers must exploit serendipitous or planned opportunities that are external to the data themselves.

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