A resonable (economic) definition of "disabled" is "not able to contribute productive work"...
Agreed, but my impression is that SSI is targeted at medical disabilities- "I used to be a manual laborer but I now have persistent back pain" instead of "I used to be a manual laborer but now I'm structurally unemployed." The system as is encourages the medicalization of economic issues- and in particular of exaggerating the medical impact of issues rather than ameliorating them.
SSI is targeted at medical disabilities- "I used to be a manual laborer but I now have persistent back pain" instead of "I used to be a manual laborer but now I'm structurally unemployed."
Right, because the former means unable to work, while the latter usually means "can't find a job that I like enough".
The system as is encourages the medicalization of economic issues- and in particular of exaggerating the medical impact of issues rather than ameliorating them.
I agree. I have no particular wish to defend SSI or the way ...
A post from Gregory Cochran's and Henry Harpending's excellent blog West Hunter.
The commenter Ron Pavellas adds:
The Wasserman Test.