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National Inquiry into Employment and Disability: Issues Paper 1

National Inquiry into Employment and Disability

Issues Paper 1: Employment and Disability – The Statistics

What does the data say about the impact of disability on equality of opportunity in employment for people with disabilities?

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Last updated 4: March 2005.


This Issues Paper sets out the context for the National Inquiry into Employment and Disability. It includes some of the recently available statistics regarding the employment of people with disabilities in Australia.

Most of the statistics in this paper are drawn from Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) data from 2003.[1] The ABS definition of disability includes anyone who has experienced a 'limitation, restriction or impairment, which has lasted, or is likely to last, for at least six months and restricts everyday activities'.

Another purpose of this Issues Paper is to seek feedback about:

  • what other relevant data is available, and
  • what other data should be collected to better assess the successes and failures of measures designed to improve the opportunities for people with disabilities in the open workplace.

1. How many people with disabilities live in Australia?

Almost 20 per cent of Australians have a disability (3.96 million people). This proportion is increasing, particularly as the population ages.[2] 19.8 per cent of all males and 20.1 per cent of all females report having a disability.[3]

Of those people with a disability, 86 per cent experience limitations in core activities (such as self care, mobility or communication), or restrictions in schooling or employment.[4] 6.3 per cent of people in Australia have a profound or severe core-activity limitation.[5]

Most people with a disability have physical conditions (83.9%). 11.3 per cent of people with disabilities have mental and behavioural disorders and 4.8 per cent have intellectual and developmental disorders.

People with mental or behavioural conditions are more likely to have profound or severe limitation to their core activities than those with a physical condition (46% compared to 29%). Over half (56%) of those with psychoses or mood affective disorders, such as dementia and depression, have profound or severe limitations to their core activities.[6]

2. What are the participation and unemployment rates for people with disabilities?

Fewer people with disabilities participate in the workforce than those without disabilities. More people with disabilities are unemployed than those without disabilities.

In 2003, 53.2 per cent of people with disabilities participated in the labour force as compared to 80.6 per cent of those without a disability. Since 1993, the labour force participation rate of people with disabilities has fallen, while the rate for people without disabilities has risen.[7]

Table 1: Labour force participation and unemployment rates of people with and without disabilities

  People with disabilities People without disabilities
  1993 1998 2003 1993 1998 2003
Labour force participation rate 54.9% 53.2% 53.2% 76.9% 80.1% 80.6%
Unemployment rate 17.8% 11.5% 8.6% 12.0% 7.8% 5.0%

Source: ABS, 2003, p26; Productivity Commission, Volume 2: Appendices, pA.2. Persons aged 15-64 years living in households.

The result of a lower labour force participation rate, when combined with a higher unemployment rate, is that people with disabilities are less likely to be employed than others. In 1993 a person with a disability was 23 per cent less likely than a person without a disability to be in employment, and in 1998 they were 26 per cent less likely to be employed. [8]

The severity of the disability that a person has, affects both the level of labour force participation and the unemployment rate.

Table 2: Labour force participation and unemployment rates of people with disabilities, by type of restriction

Restriction
Labour force participation rate
Unemployment rate
  1993 1998 2003 1993 1998 2003
Core activity restriction            
Profound 19.9% 18.9% 15.2% 20.9% 7.4% 13.9%
Severe 39.9% 40.2% 35.8% 22.2% 11.6% 9.5%
Moderate 42.9% 46.3% 47.9% 18.0% 13.1% 7.6%
Mild 51.3% 56.5% 50.6% 18.5% 9.3% 7.7%
Schooling or employment restriction 56.2% 46.4% 44.9% 27.6% 12.9% 11.5%
All persons with restrictions 46.5% 49.3% 47.7% 21.0% 11.7% 9.9%

Source: ABS, 2003, p26; Productivity Commission, Volume 2: Appendices, pA.6. Persons aged 15-64 years living in households.

Participation in the workforce also varies according to the nature of the disability. The workplace participation rate for people with a psychiatric disability receiving disability support payments is only 29%.[9]

Women with disabilities are less likely to be in the workforce than men with disabilities. In addition, the unemployment rate of women with disabilities has increased in the last five years while that for women without disabilities has decreased significantly.

Table 3: Labour force participation and unemployment rates of males and females with and without disabilities, 1998 and 2003

  Labour force participation Unemployment rates
  1998 2003 1998 2003
Females        
With a disability 45.5% 46.9% 8.6% 8.3%
Without a disability 71.0% 72.2% 8.0% 5.3%
Males        
With a disability 60.3% 59.3% 13.5% 8.8%
Without a disability 89.2% 88.9% 7.7% 4.8%

Source: ABS, 2003, p26; ABS, 1998, p35. Persons aged 15-64 years living in households.

In 2003 people with disabilities were more likely to work part-time (37%) than those who did not have a disability (29%).[10]

3. How much do people with a disability earn when they are employed?

When employed, people with disabilities earn lower wages, on average, than workers without disabilities. Having a disability reduced the average gross weekly wages of females by $110 (24 per cent) and males by $105 (17 per cent) in 1998, compared with people without disabilities.[11]

The overall levels of income earned by people with disabilities are also lower than those without disabilities. In 2003, the median gross personal income per week of people of working age with a disability was $255, compared to $501 for those without a disability.[12]

Income varies according to the type of disability. For example, the income of people with sensory and mobility disabilities is higher than that of people with psychiatric disabilities.[13]

4. How does Australia compare to the rest of the world?

Australia has the seventh lowest employment rate for people with disabilities in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). In 2003, nearly two thirds of the OECD countries measured had better employment rates than Australia for people with disabilities.[14]

Recent OECD research found that Australia has the lowest average personal income for people with disabilities, at 44 per cent of the income of people without a disability.[15]

5. Where are people with disabilities employed?

In 2003, people with disabilities were employed in the following occupations and industries.

Table 4: Occupation type of people with disabilities

Occupation
People with a disability
People without a disability
Managers and administrators
8.4%
8.1%
Professionals
18.4%
19.2%
Associate professionals
9.6%
13.4%
Tradespersons and related workers
11.9%
12.8%
Advanced clerical and service workers
4.4%
4.0%
Intermediate clerical, sales and service workers
16.3%
17.1%
Intermediate production and transport workers
10.6%
7.7%
Elementary clerical, sales and service workers
9.5%
9.8%
Labourers and related workers
10.9%
7.9%
Total
100%
100%
Industry
People with a disability
People without a disability
Agriculture, forestry and fishing
5.3%
3.6%
Mining
1.4%
0.9%
Manufacturing
11.4%
11.3%
Electricity, gas and water supply
0.6%
0.8%
Construction
9.0%
8.4%
Wholesale trade
4.2%
4.7%
Retail trade
12.0%
14.6%
Accommodation, cafes and restaurants
3.8%
5.3%
Transport and storage
5.1%
4.1%
Communication services
1.4%
1.9%
Finance and insurance
2.3%
3.9%
Property and business services
10.4%
12.1%
Government, administration and defence
5.8%
5.1%
Education
8.7%
7.1%
Health and community services
10.7%
9.6%
Cultural and recreational services
2.3%
2.4%
Personal and other services
5.3%
4.0%
Total
99.7%
99.8%

Source: ABS, 2003, p27. Persons aged 15-64 years, living in households. This table represents the percentage of the total number of people with a disability who hold positions in each category, compared to the percentage of the total number of people without a disability who hold positions in each category.

6. How many people with disabilities are employed by government?

The number of people with disabilities employed by the Commonwealth government has declined significantly over the last ten years.

In 2003-2004, people with disabilities made up 3.8 per cent of ongoing Australian Public Service (APS) employees, down from 5.8 per cent ten years ago. The Australian Public Service Commission (APSC) suggests that the decline in absolute numbers may be partly explained by a decline in lower level positions where people with a disability have historically made up a greater percentage of employees. However, the APSC notes that there has been a decline in the numbers of employees with a disability in all classifications.[16]

Some State governments have higher rates of employment of people with a disability than the Commonwealth. For example, people with disabilities make up an estimated 6 per cent of the NSW public sector. Employees who had a disability that required an adjustment at work made up an estimated 1.7 per cent of the public sector workforce in NSW in 2002. [17]

7. Your feedback

(a) What other statistics should be collected to better identify the issues affecting people with disabilities and employment?

(b) What other relevant data are you aware of?

8. How do you make a submission?

Further information about the Inquiry can be found at: https://humanrights.gov.au/our-work/disability-rights

Submissions are due by 15 April 2005.

You can email your submission to: employmentinquiry@humanrights.gov.au.

Submissions may also be sent in hard copy, audiotape or videotape, to:

Employment Inquiry

Disability Rights Unit

Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission

GPO Box 5218

Sydney NSW 2001

Questions can be directed to:

Kate Temby

Policy Officer

Disability Rights Unit

Phone: 02 9284 9767


1. Australian Bureau of Statistics, Disability, Ageing and Carers: Summary of Findings, 2003, 4430.0.

2. ABS, 2003, pp3-4. Another 20 per cent of Australians (4.15 million) have a long-term health condition that does not restrict their everyday activities.

3. ABS, 2003, p3.

4. ABS, 2003, p4

5. ABS, 2003, p3.

6. ABS, 2003, p6.

7. Labour force participation refers to people who are in work or actively looking for work.

8. Productivity Commission, Review of the Disability Discrimination Act 1992, Volume 2: Appendices, pA.4.

9. Mental Health Council of Australia, Investing in Australia’s future: the personal, social and economic benefits of good mental health, September 2004, p6.

10. ABS, 2003, p5.

11. Productivity Commission, Volume 2: Appendices, pA.12.

12. ABS 2003, p3. Persons aged 15-64 years living in households

13. Productivity Commission, Volume 2: Appendices, pA.10.

14. OECD, Employment Outlook: Towards more and better jobs, 2003, p141.

15. OECD, Transforming Disability into Ability, Policies to Promote Work and Income Security for Disabled People, 2003, p29.

16. Australian Public Service Commission, State of the Service Report 2003-04.

17. Director of Equal Opportunity in Public Employment, http://www.eeo.nsw.gov.au/aboutus/ar2003.htm.