Disability, Work and Inclusion
Mainstreaming in All Policies and Practices
One in seven working-age adults identifies as having a disability in OECD countries, a share that is also substantial and growing among young people (8% in 2019). Many of them are excluded from meaningful work and have low levels of income and social engagement. This report documents the current labour market situation of people with disability, who continue to face large employment, unemployment and poverty gaps compared with people without disability. The report concludes that the goal set up some twenty years ago of making disability policies pro-active and employment-oriented has not been achieved. In particular, key areas of disability policy have received too little attention so far, such as policies to support young people with disability, improve the skills of people with disability, and intervene early in the course of a health problem or disability. The report calls for rigorous disability mainstreaming in all relevant policies and practices as the missing link to better labour market inclusion.
Despite high benefit coverage, poverty rates and gaps remain unacceptably high
Share of the population living in an income‑poor household and gap in the low-income risk between people with and without disability, average over 2016‑19 and 2008‑11
- Click to access:
-
Click to download XLSXLS