1 / 16

DISABILITY AND WORK: Lessons for Israel from an OECD study

Annual Conference/MOITAL Tel Aviv, 15 March 2011. DISABILITY AND WORK: Lessons for Israel from an OECD study. Christopher Prinz Employment Analysis and Policy Division www.oecd.org/els/disability. OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION. The aims of disability policy Selected key outcomes

payton
Télécharger la présentation

DISABILITY AND WORK: Lessons for Israel from an OECD study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Annual Conference/MOITAL Tel Aviv, 15 March 2011 DISABILITY AND WORK:Lessons for Israelfrom an OECD study Christopher Prinz Employment Analysis and Policy Division www.oecd.org/els/disability

  2. OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION • The aims of disability policy • Selected key outcomes • Policy lessons from across the OECD • Conclusions

  3. AIMS OF SICKNESS AND DISABILITY POLICY • Provide income security in periods of (short-term or long-term) work incapacity • Help people stay in the labour market or return to it as quickly as possible • Reconcile these potentially contradictory goals • Need to assess work capacity and identify those who need benefits, temporarily or permanently, and those who need employment supports

  4. POLICY COMPLEXITIES • Target group: Policies have to serve a very diverse group, with diverse work capacity and needs • Range of policy stakeholders involved is very broad • Comprehensive reform of other social systems • Unemployment, social assistance, and pension schemes • Reforms of disability schemes lagging behind, which is one reason for why disability benefit systems have become a benefit of last resort in many OECD countries

  5. Gradually increasing disability benefit recipiency … Disability benefit recipients in per cent of the population aged 20-64in 16 OECD countries, early 1980s and 2007/2008 Source: OECD (Sickness, Disability and Work review)

  6. … and increasingly because of mental disorders Proportion of inflows into disability benefit due to mental health conditions in 17 OECD countries, mid-1990s and 2007/08 Source: OECD (Sickness, Disability and Work review)

  7. “Medicalisation” of labour market problems Unemployment rate (blue line) and disability benefit recipiency rate (black line), two exemplary OECD countries, 1970-2008 Source: OECD (Sickness, Disability and Work review)

  8. Only about four in ten peoplewith disability have a job … Employment rates of people with and without disability in 29 OECD countries, latest available year (mid to late-2000s) Source: OECD (Sickness, Disability and Work review)

  9. … unemployment is twice as high for people with disability … Unemployment rates of people with and without disability in 28 OECD countries, latest available year (mid to late-2000s) Source: OECD (Sickness, Disability and Work review)

  10. … and poverty risks are also much higherfor people with disability Poverty rates (at 60% median income) and relative poverty risks in 29 OECD countries, by disability status, mid-2000s Source: OECD (Sickness, Disability and Work review)

  11. HAVE COUNTRIES REACTED? • Overall shift towards employment-oriented measures • Reforms have become more comprehensive… • …and increasingly include changes to benefit systems • Reforms have led to better outcomes in a number of OECD countries (especially falling benefit inflows) • But, difficult to win society over comprehensive change => OECD conclusion: more needs to be done; policies and institutions in place are still not good enough

  12. Stronger focus on employment-oriented measures Proportion of vocational rehabilitation and employment-related public spending in total incapacity-related spending, selected OECD countries, 1990-2007 Source: OECD (Sickness, Disability and Work review)

  13. POLICY LESSONS FOR ISRAEL 1. Improved procedures and stronger cooperation across agencies • Improve cross-agency cooperation • Examples: merging of agencies; information exchange; cross-funding; financial incentives • Israel: awareness increasing but still policy in silos • Engage with clients as early as possible • Examples: early involvement of social insurance; no benefit without testing of reintegration potential • Israel: vocational rehabilitation coming too late

  14. POLICY LESSONS FOR ISRAEL 2. Responsibilities and incentives for employers and individuals • Strengthen individual and employer responsibilities • Examples: activation framework; much strengthened employer obligations including financial incentives • Israel: policies largely of voluntary nature; employers not so far involved as stakeholders • Make work pay for individuals • Examples: wage subsidies instead of benefits • Israel: improvements ongoing; benefits still relatively high for those with poor qualifications

  15. CONCLUSIONS • Policy matters: Policy is behind the disability problem; policy reorientation is needed to solve it • Incentives and responsibilities of key actors, and cooperation between them is not good enough • Reform needs to be comprehensive and based on good evidence as well as a broad consensus • Good implementation needs a change in mindsets of all stakeholders; and better collaboration of government, social partners and civil society

  16. OECD PUBLICATIONS & ACTIVITIES • Mental Health and Work project (new project, ongoing) • Expert Meeting 2010: see www.oecd.org/els/disability • Sickness, Disability and Work: Breaking the Barriers (2006-10) • A Synthesis of Findings Across OECD Countries, OECD, 2010. • Canada: Time for structural reform, OECD, 2010. • High-Level Policy Forum: see www.oecd.org/els/disability/stockholmforum • Sweden: Will the recent reforms make it?, OECD, 2009. • Volume 3: Denmark, Finland, Ireland and the Netherlands, OECD, 2008. • Volume 2: Australia, Luxembourg, Spain and United Kingdom, OECD, 2007. • Volume 1: Norway, Poland and Switzerland, OECD, 2006. • Transforming Disability into Ability, OECD, 2003

More Related