[ Download ]
Abstract
Taiwan’s 1997 Disabled Citizens Protection
Act required organizations to meet minimum employment rates for people with
physical or psychiatric disabilities, with lower quotas for the private sector.
This study investigates whether the impact of psychiatric disorders, including
affective and anxiety disorders, on employment differed across sectors in 2005.
Data are drawn from Taiwan's 2005
National Health Interview Survey. The analysis primarily adopts a
multinomial probit approach to estimate impacts across
sectors among adults aged 18 to 64 by gender. To
consider potential endogeneity, it pursues an augmented regression approach. The instrumental variable is the
community prevalence of psychiatric disorders. Both
exogenous and endogenous results consistently indicate
serious consequences in the private sector,
especially in its subsector of employed, rather than
the public sector, for both males
and females. Improving
employment for individuals with psychiatric disorders in the private sector,
especially for private sector employees, remains a challenge.
JEL classification numbers: I18,
J21, J24.
Keywords: Community prevalence,
Disabled Citizens Protection Act, Employment, psychiatric disorders, Taiwan.