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The ADA seems to have failed
From Scott Sumner at EconLog.
"I noticed this in a paper by David H. Autor and Mark Duggan:
The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) forcefully
articulates this contemporary view of disability: "Physical or mental
disabilities in no way diminish a person's right to fully participate in
all aspects of society... The Nation's proper goals regarding
individuals with disabilities are to assure equality of opportunity,
full participation, independent living, and economic self-sufficiency
for such individuals."
Later they report the effects of the legislation:
As documented in Figures 6a and 6b, the employment rate of
males in their forties and fifties with a self-reported disability fell
from 28 percent in 1988 to 16 percent in 2008 (approximately a 40
percent decline). The employment rate of comparably aged males without a
disability held roughly constant at 87 to 88 percent. For females in
this same age range with disabilities, the employment rate declined
slightly (from 18 to 15 percent) while the employment rate of their
counterparts without a disability rose from 66 to 76 percent.
It's difficult to think of a piece of legislation that failed more
abysmally than the ADA. So now what to we do? Will the supporters of
the ADA concede that it failed and call for repeal? Not likely. A cynic
might claim that the Americans with Disabilities Act is not about
getting disabled people into the workforce, it's about creating jobs for
lawyers.
By the way, the law was passed in 1990 with strong support from both liberals and conservatives. An economist named Walter Oi was one of the few lonely voices warning that a "rights" based approach would fail.
Although Oi was a US citizen, born in the United States, he was put
in an internment camp in WWII because his parents were from Japan. In
1942, many of the best and the brightest thought these internment camps
were a good idea. In 1990, many of the best and the brightest thought
the ADA was a good idea. Don't let anyone intimidate you for going
against the conventional wisdom by holding "unacceptable" opinions. If
you have good reasons for your contrarian opinion, then history will
vindicate you.
By the way, Walter Oi was blind."
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