Will Disabled Workers Be Winners or Losers in the Post-COVID-19 Labour Market?

Holland, Paula (2021) Will Disabled Workers Be Winners or Losers in the Post-COVID-19 Labour Market? Disabilities, 1 (3): 1030013. pp. 161-173. ISSN 2673-7272

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Abstract

Workplace inflexibility contributes to the higher rates of job loss and unemployment experienced by disabled people. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many countries already had significant disability employment gaps. Based on evidence from previous recessions, the global recession resulting from the pandemic is likely to have a severer and longer-lasting impact on the employment of disabled workers compared with non-disabled workers. In the UK, there is already evidence that the disability employment gap has widened since the pandemic. On the other hand, the pandemic initiated increased access to home-working, a change in working arrangements that may prove beneficial to disabled workers employed in desk-based roles. Home-working can increase the accessibility of employment and support work retention for disabled workers, yet pre-pandemic many employers had withheld it. Studies of employees’ and employers’ experiences of home-working during the pandemic have indicated a desire to retain access to home-working in the future. A permanent cultural shift to increased access to home-working would help address the disability employment gap for desk-based workers. However, disabled workers are over-represented in jobs not conducive to home-working, and in sectors that have been hardest hit by business closures during the pandemic, so the position of many disabled workers is likely to remain precarious.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Disabilities
Subjects:
?? employmentcovid-19home-workingreasonable adjustmentsdisability employment gapemployersinequitieseconomic recession ??
ID Code:
157174
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
13 Jul 2021 10:15
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Jul 2024 21:48