Content
Published:
This is an archived release.
Stable employment rate for disabled people
The employment rate among disabled people remained relatively stable from the second quarter of 2002 to the second quarter of 2005, although there have been some changes from one year to the next. The change recorded for the past year is not statistically significant.
In the second quarter of 2005, 44 per cent of disabled people were in employment. In comparison, the employment rate in the population as a whole was 74 per cent. The employment rate among disabled men and women was 47 and 42 per cent respectively. In the population as a whole the corresponding figures were 77 and 71 per cent.
More women than men are disabled
About 15 per cent of the population aged 16-66 have a disability, which is defined as long-term health problems that may limit everyday life. The disability rate was 17 per cent among women and 14 per cent among men. In total, 471 000 people regarded themselves as disabled in the second quarter of 2005. These figures have remained more or less unchanged since the second quarter of last year.
Gap is smaller for young people
The difference in the employment rate between the population as a whole and the disabled population was only 6 percentage points among people aged 16-24 years. In older groups, the difference was around 30 percentage points. Among those aged 60-66 years, however, the difference was 20 percentage points.
Source
The data presented in this article are based on an ad hoc module of questions to the Labour Force Survey in the second quarter of 2005.
Tables:
The statistics is published with Labour force survey.
Additional information
The data presented in this article are based on an ad hoc module of questions to the Labour Force Survey in the second quarter of 2013.
Contact
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Arbeidsmarked og lønn
E-mail: arbeidsmarked@ssb.no