Do You Need Help With Your Disability Claim?

Social Security Disability Attorneys and Advocates can help you in all phases of the social security disability claim process. Contact an advocate today for your FREE case evaluation!

Posts Tagged ‘Center for American Progress’

Proposal to reform SSDI based on private disability insurance, belief that new health-care law will stand

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

By Mike Hinshaw

As promised, we are tracking developments about proposals to streamline or otherwise improve the SSDI/SSI system.

The joint report from the Brookings Institution’s Hamilton Project and the Center for American Progress referenced in a previous post was released earlier this month. The authors, David H. Autor and Mark Duggan, are professors of economics, Autor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Duggan at the University of Maryland. Both are research associates for the National Bureau of Economic Research (the outfit charged with pronouncing the official beginnings and endings of recessions).

‘Twin problems’ for SSDI

A Dec. 17 piece at Investors.com describes the 48-page report as a proposal aimed at “reforming SSDI to solve its twin problems of impending fiscal shortfalls and poor employment incentives.”

The SSDI program has been projected to be in the red by 2018. From the report:

Due to its rapid growth, SSDI has come to encompass an ever-larger share of the Social Security system budget. In 1989, approximately one in ten Social Security dollars was spent on SSDI. By 2009, this number had risen to almost one in five Social Security dollars (18 percent), as shown in Figure 3. SSDI expenditures currently exceed the payroll tax revenue the program collects, and analysts project that the SSDI trust fund will be exhausted in 2018, twenty-two years ahead of the trust fund for Social Security retirement (the so-called Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, or OASI). The rapid expansion of SSDI contributes significantly to the deteriorating financial health of the overall Social Security system since both depend on the Social Security payroll tax.

A new ‘front end,’ using private disability insurance

Autor’s and Duggan’s idea, says the Investors.com piece, is to create “a new ‘front-end’ universal program of private disability insurance (PDI) paid for out of a new payroll tax to be shared by employers and employees. PDI would provide employment supports to disabled workers with a view of keeping them on the job. It would also provide new subsidies to employers to retain disabled workers on the job.

“Under their reform, applications to SSDI by those with disabilities but who could continue working with assistive technologies would be statutorily delayed by 22 months, during which time they would continue to receive PDI’s employment supports.”

Borrowing from unemployment and workers’ comp programs

Part of the idea is to model a new approach based on workers’ compensation and unemployment benefits programs. From the report:


Our proposal envisions extending PDI coverage to the vast majority of U.S. workers, in much the same way that UI and WC benefits are universally provided to workers who participate substantially in the labor market. PDI coverage under our proposal would form the first line of defense in the U.S. worker disability system. Its primary goal would be supporting work. Thus, in contrast to the traditional SSDI system—but similar to the PDI plans numerous employers purchase—it would treat disability and gainful employment as potentially compatible conditions rather than mutually exclusive states.

The proposed policy would support workers from 90 days to 2.25 years following onset of disability, providing partial income replacement and supports geared toward helping individuals maximize work readiness and self-sufficiency. After receiving PDI benefits for twenty-four months, individuals who are unable to engage in substantial gainful employment would transition into the SSDI system. The screening criteria for SSDI would be unchanged.


It is instructive to consider the average amount paid for private long-term disability coverage in the market at present. Using data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics on the average hourly cost of PDI coverage ($0.04) and the fraction of workers with long-term disability coverage (32 percent), we estimate that the average policy costs approximately $250 per year—about $20 per month.

This is likely an upper bound on the average cost of policies under our proposal, as current PDI policies are, on average, significantly more generous than the one we propose. For example, the median maximum monthly benefit of these policies is $7,500, which is three times greater than the corresponding maximum in our plan. Additionally, our proposed coverage would pay benefits for a maximum of just two years, while existing policies are typically long-term and may provide at least partial benefits to the worker until he or she reaches full retirement age.

Questions to be answered

Of course, the plan is not without hurdles. For one, enough variations exist among the various states’ workers’ compensation systems that finding a single “role model” to copy is unlikely. For example, Texas doesn’t even require employers to carry workers’ compensation insurance.

On the other hand, according to the report, five “U.S. states already mandate that employers provide temporary disability insurance to their workers.  Although little studied, the available data on these mandates suggest that they have not substantially hindered labor market operation but have provided valuable insurance to workers.” Furthermore, a program similar to that one proposed already has been seen some success in the Netherlands.

Another rough spot may be persuading employees to go along with paying for a share of a program that does not provide for medical care, which the authors view as unnecessary because of the passage of “Obamacare.”  According to the report: “Alongside lost income, medical care is one of the most costly aspects of disability. Private-sector disability policies do not pay for medical care. Instead, they serve to partially insure lost earnings as well as reimburse workplace accommodations and certain rehabilitation services that a traditional health insurance plan would not cover. Our proposed PDI coverage likewise would not cover medical care. Such coverage is unnecessary because health insurance is slated to become nearly universal and much more affordable for American workers over the next several years as a result of the recently enacted Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.”

However, several states have filed suit against health care law, and a federal judge recently ruled a portion of the law unconstitutional, and many observers expect the final word on the law will come only with a ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court.

New report calls for incentives to retain disabled workers; June report explains SSDI, VDC differences and goals

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010
By Mike Hinshaw
If you live in Connecticut, this may be of interest, from TheDay.com:

WHO: Linda, a 67-year-old grandmother of three, who became responsible for her daughter’s children after her daughter became too ill from HIV to care for them any longer.

AGENCY: Alliance for Living.

THEIR SITUATION: Linda had her daughter move back home to New London after she was diagnosed with HIV. Her daughter’s medications and health condition leave her with little energy, so like so many grandparents today, Linda is now raising her daughter’s children. The kids range in age from 8 to 15. They are living on their mother’s Social Security disability income supplemented by grandma’s Social Security. Their Christmas wish is for mom to be well again.

WHAT TO GIVE: Gift cards to grocery and department stores.

TO DONATE: Donations can be dropped off at the Alliance for Living, 154 Broad St., New London, 06320. For more information, call Cheryl at (860) 447-0884, ext. 229.

Joint report: Keep disabled workers, help SSDI system

According to a Nov. 27 article in The Washington Post, a joint report from the Brookings Institution’s Hamilton Project and the Center for American Progress has concluded that “The government should create incentives for employers to retain disabled workers on their payrolls as a way of slowing unsustainable increases in the number of people receiving Social Security disability benefits.”

According to this blog, the report will be released in a few days and will call for upfront action: “The report by the Brookings Institute’s Hamilton Project and the Center for American Progress, to be released on Dec. 3, urges adding a ‘front end’ of benefits to keep the disabled in their jobs and slow down the rapidly growing expense of the federal disability program, also known as Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI).

“Before workers could receive SSDI benefits, they would have to be approved for benefits from the private policy — benefits that would go toward rehabilitation services, partial income support and other related services.”

Troubling figures, revisited

We have reported on the increase in SSDI applicants, particularly the spike from 2008 to 2009, when demand jumped 21 per cent. The Post cites the new report as providing more troubling figures: “Between 1989 and 2009, the share of working-age adults receiving SSDI has doubled to 4.6 percent, and the cost of the program has more than tripled from $40 billion to $121 billion in the same time period, the report said.

“Strikingly, the enrollment increases have not coincided with an increase in disabilities; roughly 10 percent of adults have reported disabilities in both 1989 and 2009. Instead, the enrollment increases reflect ‘a rising rate of dependency and a declining rate of labor force participation among adults with disabilities,’ the report stated.”

As soon as we can get a copy of the report, we’ll discuss it and provide links.

Congressional Research Service report: SSDI versus Veterans Disability Compensation

A Nov. 23 post at a site for what its “About” page says is a global publishing and subscription provider for “research, compliance and management tools for attorneys, consultants, corporations and government agencies,” has a nice primer on June 2010 report from the Congressional Research Service that “sought to clarify why one group of individuals with disabilities may be eligible for benefits under the Veterans Disability Compensation program (VDC), but ineligible for benefits under the Social Security Disability Insurance program under the Title II of the Social Security Act (SSDI).”

Here’s a link to the report itself: “Disability Benefits Available Under the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Veterans Disability Compensation (VDC) Programs.”

Two of ‘largest programs’ have important differences

According to the report summary, SSDI, administered by the Social Security Administration, and VDC, administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs, “are two of the largest federal disability programs, but strongly differ along several dimensions, including the populations served, how each program defines a ‘disability,’ as well as varying eligibility requirements.”

The report summarizes three crucial differences:

First, SSDI is an insurance program that replaces a portion of earnings for an eligible worker whose illness or injury—while not necessarily caused by a work-related incident—results in an inability to work. SSDI is one of several federal programs funded through the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) payroll tax and the Self-Employment Contributions Act (SECA) tax to which all workers and employers in covered occupations (including military personnel) and self-employed individuals make contributions. On the other hand, VDC is not insurance, but is a compensation program in that payments are made to veterans who develop medical conditions that are related to their service in the military. VDC is non-contributory and neither veterans nor active military personnel pay into the program, which is funded through a mandatory appropriation as part of the VA annual budget.

Second, while the purpose of both SSDI and VDC is to provide income security, SSDI provides a financial “safety-net” to eligible civilian and military workers due to their inability to work as a result of long-term or terminal injury or illness. Conversely, VDC provides veterans with tax-free, cash benefits specifically for service-connected illnesses or injuries. The ability to work is not factored into VDC disability determinations, although additional compensation is available for veterans who are unemployable as the result of a service-connected condition(s).

Third, SSDI only compensates workers that are fully disabled, whereas VDC compensates veterans for both partial and fully disabling injuries and illnesses. The VA is further guided by a principle that views disability compensation as an obligation, owed to veterans, for injuries impacting employment that were incurred or aggravated by their service to the country. SSDI benefits are granted solely on medical and economic grounds and other noneconomic factors are not considered. Eligibility requirements generally tend to be more stringent for SSDI than [for] VDC, and most veterans will not likely meet the criteria for both programs.