PhD Seminar: Disability and workers' productivities in Australia: Facts, measurements and estimates

Disability and workers' productivities in Australia: Facts, measurements and estimates

Abstract: Individuals with disabilities face persistent barriers to education and labour market participation, resulting in lower productivity and earnings. This study quantifies the productivity effects of disability among Australian workers through a two-part analysis combining empirical estimation and structural modelling. Using HILDA survey data, a two-stage Heckman selection model decomposes labour productivity—following Katz and Murphy (1992)—into labour efficiency and experience efficiency. Results show that the disability-related productivity gap is mainly driven by lower labour efficiency, with experience efficiency playing a smaller but increasing role for less-educated workers over the life cycle.  A structural model is then developed to evaluate the lifetime costs of disabilities and the benefits of social insurance programs.

Details
Start Date
End Date
Venue
Fred Gruen Economics Seminar Room (H.W. Arndt Building 25A)
Presenter(s)
Iris Man-Hin Chio