Dec 6, 2014

Do Jobs With Higher "Cognitive Analytic" Skills Have Higher Rates Of Disability?

     The abstract of a study by Lauren Hersch Nicholas for the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College:
We use Health and Retirement Study data linked to the Department of Labor’s O*Net classification system to examine the relationship between lifetime exposure to occupational demands and retirement behavior. We consistently found that both non-routine cognitive analytic and non-routine physical demands were associated with worse health, earlier labor force exit, and increased use of Social Security Disability Insurance. The growing share of workers in jobs with high levels of cognitive demand may contribute to growth in DI use.
     It's obvious at ground level that people who work at jobs that have higher physical demands have higher rates of disability. It only stands to reason. However, increased rates of disability for those in jobs requiring the use of higher "cognitive analytic" skills comes as a surprise. I'm generally skeptical of government funded research that ends up calling for more government funded research. This report actually doesn't make that recommendation but this is a topic worthy of more research.

Dec 5, 2014

Colvin Defends Herself

     Here's Colvin defending herself against charges that there's somethintg illegal about a contract her agency is administering:
I've always met the highest ethical standards," ... I've worked in government my entire life. There's never been a suggestion, personal or professional, of any wrongdoing.
I'm certainly not ending my career with that, .. I came out of retirement to help this organization, not hurt it. ...
Colvin noted that the project was launched "way before I got here," ...
That's what I do, I'm a problem-fixer," ... Every organization I've gone into I try to identify what the vulnerabilities are and try to fix them. ...
     If Republicans want to block this nomination, they can. There's no need to cast ridiculous aspersions on a person who has done nothing wrong. Colvin has served Social Security and other agencies honorably.

Dec 4, 2014

ABLE Passes House

     The ABLE Bill has passed the House of Representatives. Under the bill, contributions may be made to an ABLE account set up for a recipient of Supplemental Security Income Disability (SSID) without affecting SSID entitlement. The funds in ABLE accounts may be used for "education, housing, transportation, employment training and support, assistive technology and personal support services, health, prevention and wellness, financial management and administrative services, legal fees, expenses for oversight and monitoring, funeral and burial expense."
     Although ABLE would affect needs based programs such as SSID, it will primarily help disabled people who come from middle class or wealthy families. They are the ones who will have the money to contribute to ABLE accounts. The ABLE Bill doesn't update the absurdly low income and resource limits in SSI. This is not the fault of those behind ABLE. They would like to update SSI as well. This was the best they could do. It says something about the current state of our politics that helping poor people would be considered a deal breaker for this bill.

Senators Want To Hold Up Colvin Nomination

     The Associated Press is reporting that a "group" of Republican Senators is planning to hold up Carolyn Colvin's nomination for a term as Commissioner of Social Security while they seek more information about Social Security's troubled $300 DCPS computer project. The article doesn't say who is part of this "group" or how big it is. However, it hardly takes more than one Senator to block a nomination. Holding up the nomination over this sounds preposterous to me. This was former Commissioner Michael Astrue's project. Colvin merely inherited it. It's a necessary project and one that everybody knew was bound to be messy. However, if you're looking for a pretext to block a nomination of an otherwise non-controversial nominee, I guess this will do.

     Update: It's all Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee. This nomination is dead at last for for this session of Congress.

Dec 3, 2014

Senate Finance Committee Schedules Hearing

     The Senate Finance Committee has scheduled a hearing for December 9 on Social Security: Is a Key Foundation of Economic Security Working for Women?

House Of Representatives Unanimous On Social Security Bill

     The House of Representatives has unanimously approved a bill to deny Social Security benefits to suspected Nazi war criminals. I have seen no count of the number of people affected. Probably they can be counted on one hand. It's more than possible that everyone who could be affected is already dead. If not, they certainly will be soon.
     Update:  Here's what Andrew Rosenthal  at the New York Times has to say on this bill:
[T]he crowing this week by some members of Congress over the House’s passage of a bill denying Social Security benefits to Nazis was ridiculous. ...
The Nazi bill is a political freebie. Passing it does not constitute a real achievement or a profile in courage. The issue is, at best, trivial. ...
Of those nonagenarian fiends, the AP said in October, “there are at least four living beneficiaries.”
The small number does not mean, once again, that the payments were acceptable. The AP said that “millions” went to these people over the years.
But none of that excuses the gas bagging by the Democratic co-sponsor of the bill, Representative Xavier Becerra of California, on Tuesday. ...

Dec 2, 2014

Sound Familiar?

From The Canadian Press:
Terminal cancer patients, organ-transplant recipients and suicidal, debt-addled Canadians are among the 11,000 people waiting to have their appeals heard by Ottawa's badly backlogged social security tribunal.
Some of those awaiting a decision on their eligibility for benefits, including people with debilitating injuries, have had their cases expedited due to severely declining health.# Others, however, have waited years — some are still waiting — to hear whether the initial decision to deny them Canada Pension Plan disability benefits will be overturned.
Given the nature of their illnesses, a decision may come too late.