2010 Annual Report of the SSI Program

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G. RESEARCH ON RELATED TOPICS
The legislative mandate for this report requires inclusion of information about “relevant research on the SSI program by the Social Security Administration (SSA) and others.” Section 1 of this appendix describes major ongoing projects. Section 2 presents a bibliography of studies regarding SSI payment levels, recipients, and reform proposals that were published in the past 10 years by both public and private entities.
1. Ongoing Research
a. SSI Policy Simulations
Using Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) data matched to administrative records, SSA researchers have developed a model of financial eligibility for SSI that has been used to estimate the rate of participation among the eligible elderly and the effects of various options to modify the SSI program (see Davies et al. 2001/2002). The model suggests that the rate of participation among the eligible elderly was about 62 percent in 1991. The comparable participation rate estimate at the end of 1996 was also 62 percent. The model has recently been updated to use the 2004 SIPP matched to administrative records. We are developing a participation rate estimate for the elderly based on the 2004 model and examining patterns of differences from previous estimates in the literature.
The model was also utilized to simulate the potential effects of several approaches to expand the SSI program to fight poverty among the elderly. Approaches focusing on incremental changes in the Federal benefit rate, the general income exclusion, and the resources test appear roughly equally effective in reducing the poverty gap among the elderly on a cost-equivalent basis, while two approaches focusing on relaxing the earned income exclusion are less effective (Davies, Rupp, and Strand, 2004). More recently, the model has been expanded to address SSI participation and financial eligibility among the working-age disabled, and to assess SSI benefit restructuring options for the entire SSI population. The working-aged model allows for the identification of working-aged persons by their SSI financial eligibility status, DI insured status, and participation in both programs. The model recently has been used to assess SSI’s role in complementing and enhancing the safety net for the working-aged population (Rupp, Davies, and Strand, 2008), focusing on the role of SSI in providing cash benefits to some DI beneficiaries during the 5-month waiting period and beyond, and increasing health insurance coverage among the disabled by providing access to Medicaid. The model has been used to simulate the effects of several approaches to changing in-kind support and maintenance rules and options for altering the calculation of the Federal benefit rate for certain living arrangement categories (Balkus et al. 2009). Simulation results are applied to current elderly, working-age, and child SSI populations to provide up-to-date estimates for potential program changes. The financial eligibility model has also been utilized to study eligibility for Medicare buy-in programs (see Rupp and Sears 2000; Sears 2001/2002). More recently the model has been extensively utilized to estimate the size of the population potentially eligible for the Medicare Part D low income subsidy.
b. National Survey of SSI Children and Families
The National Survey of SSI Children and Families (NSCF) was designed to address a number of SSA policy and program objectives. One objective was to address issues specifically pertaining to the effects of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (welfare reform). However, the survey as designed is useful for the study of a broader range of issues of current interest to policy makers. Most importantly, it allows for the analysis of a nationally representative cross-section of SSI beneficiary children aged 0-17 and young adults aged 18-23. Among the questions the survey answers are the following:
The NSCF data collection began July 2001 and concluded June 2002. The NSCF sample size was considerably larger for SSI children and young adults than the sample size available in other surveys. Altogether, 8,535 interviews were completed for the NSCF, including 5,006 who received SSI benefits in December 2000 and 5,033 who received SSI benefits in December 1996. NSCF documentation is available on the SSA website at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/disabilityresearch/nscf.htm. Davies and Rupp (2005/2006) provides an overview of the survey and describes some key features. Other analyses using these data are discussed in section c below. Although it was a cross-sectional data collection effort, longitudinal data on SSI program participation are being added to the NSCF through continuing efforts to update the match between NSCF and SSI administrative records.
c. Analytic Studies
SSA researchers have conducted a number of research studies designed to provide a better understanding of the SSI program, the elderly and disabled target populations, program interactions, and the role of the SSI program in the United States social safety net. Koenig and Rupp (2003/2004) estimates the prevalence of households and families with multiple SSI recipients and provided an assessment of the poverty status of multirecipient households. Rupp and Davies (2004) tracks survey respondents from the 1984 SIPP for 14 years using administrative records on SSI and DI participation and death events to assess the relationship between self-reported health status, disabilities, mortality, and participation in the SSI and DI programs. Weathers et al. (2007) uses a unique longitudinal dataset based on administrative data from the National Technical Institute for the Deaf (NTID) linked to SSA administrative records to conduct a case study of SSI children who applied for postsecondary education at NTID. A study using SSA administrative records from August 2005 through August 2007 to analyze SSI recipients who lived in counties and parishes affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita was recently published (Davies and Hemmeter 2010). Hemmeter (2009) examines the occupational distribution of SSI disability recipients aged 18-61 who work. Hemmeter and Gilby (2009) analyzes age-18 redetermination outcomes for SSI youth, including appeals of initial cessations and subsequent reapplications for benefits after a period of ineligibility.
Several studies focus on the distributional effects of the SSI program through its interactions with other Federal and State programs. One study is utilizing longitudinal data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) to assess the role of SSI and related social safety net programs in providing a buffer against the potentially adverse effects of disability shocks in the near-elderly population on financial well-being. Rupp et al. (2007) provides an empirical analysis of the SSI Federal benefit rate for assessing benefit adequacy among elderly Social Security beneficiaries and the effectiveness of the SSI benefit eligibility screens for targeting economically vulnerable elderly beneficiaries. Balkus et al. (2009) examines the distributional effects of replacing current policies on living arrangements and in-kind support with a simpler, cost neutral alternative. Rupp and Strand (2007) highlights the distributional implications of Social Security reform scenarios involving a potential shift from wage indexing to price indexing or longevity indexing in the establishment of initial benefits. Strand (2010) uses matched SIPP records to examine potential eligibility for three major means-tested programs (SSI, Medicaid, and Food Stamp) among near retirees aged 55 to 64 and eventual SSI participation upon reaching age 65. A related research project analyzes interactions between SSI, DI, Medicaid and Medicare on a cohort of SSI and DI awardees utilizing matched administrative data from SSA and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Wamhoff and Wiseman (2005/2006) examines the financial consequences of TANF-to-SSI transfers and develops new estimates of both the prevalence of receipt of SSI benefits among families receiving cash assistance from TANF and the proportion of new SSI awards that go to adults and children residing in families receiving TANF-related benefits. Trenkamp and Wiseman (2007) addresses the connections between the SSI and Food Stamp programs. Meijer, Karoly, and Michaud (2009, 2010) analyzes eligibility for the Medicare Part D Low Income Subsidy, which is based on a simplified SSI methodology.
In 2003 and again in 2005 SSA provided funding for interviewing supplemental samples of SSI and DI beneficiaries to increase the SIPP sample size available for analyses of these target groups. DeCesaro and Hemmeter (2008) examines the characteristics of DI and SSI program participants using the 2003 supplemental sample combined with the 2001 SIPP, both matched to administrative records. Using data from the Current Population Survey matched to SSA administrative records, Nicholas and Wiseman (2009) assesses the impact of using administrative records on poverty estimation among elderly SSI recipients using the official and alternative definitions of poverty. Wiseman and Ycas (2008) compares the Canadian social assistance program for the elderly with the SSI program, looking at program structure, cost and consequences for elderly poverty rates.
A number of studies are utilizing the NSCF to focus on children and young adults receiving SSI. Rupp et al. (2005/2006) presents highlights from the survey characterizing SSI children with disabilities and their families. Additional research studies employment and caregiving patterns of parents of SSI children (Rupp and Ressler 2009), examines employment and program outcomes among young adults after their eligibility redetermination at age 18 (Hemmeter, Kauff, and Wittenburg 2009), and analyzes factors affecting out-of-pocket medical expenses and unmet health care needs of disabled children (DeCesaro and Hemmeter 2009). These papers were published in a special issue of the Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation (volume 30, number 3) devoted to SSI children and young adults and the transition to adulthood. The special issue also includes a paper that introduces the issue and examines the life-cycle human capital development and longer-term SSI and earnings outcomes of SSI youth as they transition to adulthood (Davies, Rupp, and Wittenburg 2009), as well as two papers that focus on SSA’s Youth Transition Demonstration (Fraker and Rangarajan 2009; Luecking and Wittenburg 2009). The articles from the special issue are available on SSA’s web site at http://socialsecurity.gov/policy/JVR.html.
d. Evaluation of the Ticket to Work Program
The Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999 requires the Commissioner of Social Security to provide for independent evaluations to assess the effectiveness of the Ticket to Work program and to submit three separate evaluation reports to Congress. The evaluation includes a survey of beneficiaries with disabilities and participants in the Ticket to Work program that collects information on the health and well-being of beneficiaries and on how beneficiaries use the Ticket to Work program.
Rounds one, two, and three of the National Beneficiary Survey (NBS) have concluded with an overall response rate of 78 percent, with responses from more than 20,000 beneficiaries with disabilities. We delayed Round 4 of the survey because of the Ticket to Work program changes implemented in 2008. We expect to complete Round 4 in 2010.
We submitted the first evaluation report to Congress in 2004 (Thornton et al. 2004)1, and also published the first interim evaluation report early in 2006 (Thornton et al. 2006)1. We submitted the third, post-FY 2005, evaluation report to Congress in October 2007 and the post-FY 2006 report in October of 2008.
The reports indicate low but growing participation rates with the vast majority of ticket assignments going to State vocational rehabilitation agencies. The findings thus far indicate that the Ticket to Work program has significant potential, but the program needs improvements in beneficiary awareness and Employment Network (EN) incentives. Survey findings show that many more beneficiaries are interested in employment and working their way off disability benefits than is reflected in Ticket to Work participation. Most beneficiaries remain unaware of the Ticket to Work program despite various efforts by SSA to publicize the program. Among those who are aware, a small but significant number who have tried to use their ticket have been unable to find an EN to accept it.
Many beneficiaries who are participating in the Ticket to Work program are reaching employment success, and those who leave the disability rolls appear to be remaining off of benefits for sustained periods of time. The evaluation has also found that employment success may take longer to achieve than previously anticipated. Among the earliest participants in Ticket to Work, a small but steady stream of new exits from disability benefits continued to occur more than 4 years after Ticket to Work participation began. Participation by ENs has been anemic, and the evaluation indicated that the initial payment rules were insufficient for ENs to cover their costs. Our initiatives to reduce EN costs had helped but were not enough to help ENs reach financial viability. In July 2008, we implemented new regulations for the Ticket to Work program. In the evaluation, we reviewed these new rules and found that they are likely to significantly increase the early payments to ENs, thereby making the program more financially attractive to a broader range of service providers. This in turn holds promise for expanding EN availability and reinvigorating the program.
The fifth report is a series of short papers. Each paper focuses on a specific aspect of the ticket evaluation. Eight of these papers are complete: “Process Evaluation of the Work Incentives Planning and Assistance Program”; “Characteristics, Employment, and Sources of Support among Working-Age SSI and DI Beneficiaries”; “Participation in Ticket to Work Continues to Grow But Assignment Under the Traditional Payment System Still Dominate”; “Benefits Planning, Assistance, and Outreach Service User Characteristics and Use of Work Incentives”; “2006 National Beneficiary Survey: Background and Statistical Tables”; “SSI and DI Beneficiaries with Work-Related Goals and Expectations”; “Longitudinal Statistics for New Social Security Disability Insurance Beneficiaries”; and “Longitudinal Experiences of an Early Cohort of Ticket to Work Participants.” The remaining two papers, “Time that Beneficiaries Spend Off the Rolls Due to Work and the Payments Generated for Employment Networks”; and “Can the Ticket to Work Program Be Self-Financing?” and the overview, “Highlights of the Fifth Ticket to Work Evaluation Report” are under review at the time of the release of this report. We will release the complete fifth report in 2010.
We modified the Ticket evaluation contracts to implement the fourth survey round in 2010 and to extend the analysis to cover beneficiary and service provider response to the new Ticket to Work regulations. The evaluation contractor will produce two additional reports in 2011 and 2012 under this modification.
e. Homeless Outreach Projects and Evaluation (HOPE)
In 2004, we awarded funds to 41 service providers nationwide to provide outreach services to the homeless population. These service providers were trained and given training materials to assist homeless individuals with SSA's disability application process. In October 2007, Westat, the evaluation contractor, released the final evaluation report. We are currently conducting a longitudinal evaluation of HOPE. Findings from this analysis will be available later in 2010.
f. Youth Transition Demonstration (YTD)
The YTD establishes partnerships to improve employment outcomes for youth ages 14-25 who receive (or could receive) SSI or SSDI payments on the basis of their own disability. The YTD projects include ser­vice delivery systems and a broad array of services and supports to assist youth with disabilities in their transition from school to employment and to help them gain economic self-sufficiency.
YTD began in 2003, with seven projects in six States. In 2007, SSA piloted new projects in five States, choosing a total of three new projects in Florida, Maryland, and West Virginia. These three projects are joining three (Colorado and two New York) of the original seven projects in a random assignment study. This study will produce the first evaluation of the empirical evidence of the effects of youth transition programs and modified SSI work incentives.
The modified SSI program rules that we are testing under the YTD include five elements.
Despite the finding of a continuing disability review or an age-18 medical redetermination that an individual is no longer eligible for benefits, SSA will continue paying benefits for as long as the individual continues to be a YTD participant.
The student earned income exclusion (section 1612(b)(1) of the Act), which normally applies only to students who are age 21 or younger, will apply to all participants who meet school attendance requirements.
The general earned-income exclusions (section 1612(b)(4) of the Act) permit the exclusion of $65 plus half of what an individual earns in excess of $65. For the YTD, SSA will exclude the first $65 plus three-fourths of any additional earnings.
Ordinarily, a plan to achieve self-support (PASS) must specify an employment goal that refers to getting a particular kind of job or starting a particular business. For the YTD, SSA will approve an otherwise satisfactory PASS that has either career exploration or postsecondary education as its goal. Income and assets that an individual uses for PASS expenses do not count when SSA determines SSI eligibility and payment amount.
The research findings will help to assess the implications of any such impacts for the Social Security trust funds and Federal income tax revenues.
The YTD projects in Colorado and New York have ended and will complete final reports in 2010. The Florida, Maryland, and West Virginia projects are currently recruiting and enrolling participants and implementing the interventions and services. A comprehensive final report of the six random assignment projects is due in August, 2014. 
g. Disability Program Navigators (DPNs)
The Department of Labor (DOL) and SSA jointly established the Disability Program Navigator (DPN) position. DPNs are located in DOL's One-Stop Career Centers and help disabled individuals navigate the challenges of seeking work. The rules surrounding entitlement programs and a fear of losing cash assistance and health benefits often discourage people with disabilities from working. DOL and SSA established the DPN initiative to better inform beneficiaries and other people with disabilities about the work support programs available at DOL-funded One-Stop Career Centers. This initiative is developing new/ongoing partnerships to achieve seamless, comprehensive, and integrated access to services, creating systemic change, and expanding the workforce development system's capacity to serve customers with disabilities and employers. As of October 2008, there were more than 4,425 DPNs in 43 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. DOL awarded the DPN project evaluation to Mathematica Policy Research. The final DPN project evaluation is expected to be completed in 2010. SeeSee http://www.doleta.gov/disabil­ity/.
h. TANF/SSI Disability Transition Project (TSDTP)
Both welfare agencies and the federal disability system seek to support people with disabilities and help them become more independent. However, the two systems often have differing missions and organization, definitions of disability, operational and financial issues, and work rules and incentives, making it challenging for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) programs to work together. TANF clients who apply for SSI may also confront conflicting messages from TANF agencies regarding work requirements and benefit eligibility.
To better understand the relationship between the TANF and SSI populations and programs, the Office of Program Development and Research and the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) launched the TANF-SSI Disability Transition Project (TSDTP) in October 2008. Working with ACF, TANF agencies in California, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, and New York, select counties in these states, and the evaluation firm MDRC, we will analyze program data and pilot-test program interventions for TANF clients with disabilities. SSA, ACF, TANF agencies, and low-income individuals with disabilities and their families benefit from effective and efficient services — moving toward employment when possible, making informed decisions about applying for SSI, receiving SSI as quickly as possible, and reducing administrative costs. The project will conclude in September 2011 with our recommendations regarding a larger demonstration project on coordinating TANF and SSI.
2. Bibliography of Recent Publications
American Academy of Pediatrics. Council on Children with Disabilities. “Supplemental Security Income (SSI) for Children and Youth with Disabilities.” Pediatrics 124, 6 (December 2009): 1702-1709.
American Academy of Pediatrics. Committee on Children with Disabilities. “The Continued Importance of Supplemental Security Income (SSI) for Children and Adolescents with Disabilities.” Pediatrics 107, 4, Part 1 of 2 (April 2001): 790-793.
Angel, Ronald J. “Living Arrangements and Supplemental Security Income Use Among Elderly Asians and Hispanics in the United States: The Role of Nativity and Citizenship.” Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 28, 3 (2002): 553-563.
Aron, Laudan Y. and Pamela Loprest. Meeting the Needs of Children with Disabilities. Washington, DC: The Urban Institute Press, 2007.
Autor, David H. and Mark G. Duggan. The Rise in Disability Recipiency and the Decline in Unemployment. JCPR Working Paper No. 226, Joint Center for Poverty Research, June 2001.
Balkus, Richard and Susan Wilschke. “Annual Wage Trends for Supplemental Security Income Recipients.” Social Security Bulletin 65, 2 (2003/2004): 49-58.
Balkus, Richard and Susan Wilschke. Treatment of Married Couples in the SSI Program. Issue Paper No. 2003-01. Washington, DC: Office of Disability and Income Assistance Policy, Office of Policy, Social Security Administration, December 2003.
Balkus, Richard, James Sears, Susan Wilschke, and Bernard Wixon. “Simplifying the Supplemental Security Income Program: Options for Eliminating the Counting of In-Kind Support and Maintenance.” Social Security Bulletin 68, 4 (2009): 1-25.
Balkus, Richard, L. Scott Muller, Mark Nadel, and Michael Wiseman. “The Challenge of Growth: Public Disability Benefits in the United States.” In Sick Societies? Trends in Disability Benefits in Post-Industrial Welfare States, edited by Peter A. Kemp, Annika Sunden, and Bernhard Bakker Tauritz. Geneva, Switzerland: International Social Security Association, 2006.
Barrilleaux, Charles and Ethan Bernick. “Deservingness, Discretion, and the State Politics of Welfare Spending, 1990-96.” State Politics & Policy Quarterly 3, 1 (Spring 2003): 1-23.
Battaglia, Carol. “SSI and Medicaid Recipients Have a Responsibility to Report Changes that Can Affect Benefits.” Exceptional Parent 37, 2 (February 2007): 47-48.
Beekman, John A. and Eli N. Donkar. “The Relationship Between the Supplemental Security Income and the Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance Programs During the 1990s.” North American Actuarial Journal 5, 4 (2001): 1-23.
Beers, Nathaniel S., Alexa Kemeny, Lon Sherritt, and Judith S. Palfrey. “Variations in State-Level Definitions: Children with Special Health Care Needs.” Public Health Reports 118, 5 (September/October 2003): 434-447.
Benitez-Silva, Hugo, Moshe Buchinsky, and John Rust. How Large are the Classification Errors in the Social Security Disability Award Process? National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 10219, January 2004.
Bond, Gary R, Haiyi Xie, and Robert E. Drake. “Can SSDI and SSI Beneficiaries with Mental Illness Benefit from Evidence-Based Supported Employment?” Psychiatric Services 58, 11 (November 2007): 1412-1420.
Bound, John and Richard V. Burkhauser. Tracking the Household Income of SSDI and SSI Applicants. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 99-03, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, May 2001.
Bound, John, Julie Berry Cullen, Austin Nichols, and Lucie Schmidt. “The Welfare Implications of Increasing Disability Insurance Benefit Generosity” Journal of Public Economics 88, 12 (December 2004): 2487-2514.
Brown, Michael Hayden. Geographic and Group Variation in Supplemental Security Income. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Kentucky, 2002.
Burkhauser, Richard V. and Mary C. Daly. “U.S. Disability Policy in a Changing Environment.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 16, 1 (2002): 213-224.
Burkhauser, Richard V., Mary C. Daly, and Philip R. de Jong. The Role of Disability Transfer Programs on the Economic Well Being of Working-Age People with Disabilities. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. UM08-Q2, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, October 2008.
________. Curing the Dutch Disease: Lessons for United States Disability Policy. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 2008-188, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, September 2008.
Burkhauser, Richard V., Mary C. Daly, Jeff Larrimore, and Joyce Kwok. The Transformation of Who is Expected to Work in the United States and How it Changed the Lives of Single Mothers and People with Disabilities. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 2008-187, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, September 2008.
Butrica, Barbara A. and Gordon B.T. Mermin. Annuitized Wealth and Consumption at Older Ages. Center for Retirement Research Working Paper No. 2006-26, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, December 2006.
Campbell, Kevin, Jim Baumohl, and Sharon R. Hunt. “The Bottom Line: Employment and Barriers to Work among Former SSI DA&A Beneficiaries.” Contemporary Drug Problems 30, 1-2 (Spring/Summer 2003): 195-240.
Chatterji, Pinka and Ellen Meara. Health and Labor Market Consequences of Eliminating Federal Disability Benefits for Substance Abusers. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 13407, September 2007.
Clarke, George R.G. “The Effect of Medicaid on Cash Assistance to the Aged and Disabled Poor.” Public Finance Review 31, 1 (January 2003): 3- 43.
Davies, Paul S. “SSI Eligibility and Participation Among the Oldest Old: Evidence from the AHEAD.” Social Security Bulletin 64, 3 (2001/2002): 38-63.
Davies, Paul S. and Jeffrey Hemmeter. “Supplemental Security Income Recipients Affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita: An Analysis of Two Years of Administrative Data,” Population and Environment – Special Issue on Demographic Dynamics and Natural Disasters: Learning from Katrina and Rita 31(1-3), (2010): 87-120.
Davies, Paul S. and Kalman Rupp. “An Overview of the National Survey of SSI Children and Families and Related Products.” Social Security Bulletin 66, 2 (2005/2006): 7-20.
Davies, Paul S. and Melissa M. Favreault. Interactions between Social Security Reform and the Supplemental Security Income for the Aged. Center for Retirement Research Working Paper No. 2004-02, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, February 2004.
Davies, Paul S. and Michael J. Greenwood. Welfare Reform and Immigrant Participation in the Supplemental Security Income Program. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 2004-087, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, September 2004.
Davies, Paul S., Kalman Rupp, and Alexander Strand. “The Potential of the SSI Program to Fight Poverty among the Poorest Elderly.” Journal of Aging and Social Policy 16, 1 (2004): 21-42.
Davies, Paul S., Kalman Rupp and David Wittenburg. “A Life-cycle Perspective on the Transition to Adulthood Among Children Receiving Supplemental Security Income Payments.” Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation. 30, 3 (2009): 133-151.
Davies, Paul S., Minh Huynh, Chad Newcomb, Paul O’Leary, Kalman Rupp, and Jim Sears. “Modeling SSI Financial Eligibility and Simulating the Effect of Policy Options.” Social Security Bulletin 64, 2 (2001/2002): 16-45.
DeCesaro, Anne and Jeffrey Hemmeter. “Unmet Health Care Needs and Medical Out-of-Pocket Expenses of SSI Children.” Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation 30, 3 (2009): 177-199.
________. Characteristics of Noninstitutionalized DI and SSI Program Participants. Research and Statistics Note No. 2008-02. Washington, DC: Office of Research, Evaluation, and Statistics, Office of Retirement and Disability Policy, Social Security Administration, January 2008.
Dietz, Tracy L. “Mexican American Elderly and Supplemental Security Income: Reasons and Characteristics Associated with Nonuse.” Journal of Applied Gerontology 20, 3 (September 2001): 292-306.
Dobkin, Carlos and Steven L. Puller. “The Effects of Government Transfers on Monthly Cycles in Drug Abuse, Hospitalization and Mortality.” Journal of Public Economics 91, 11-12 (December 2007): 2137-2157.
DosReis, Susan, Julie Magno Zito, Daniel J. Safer, and Karen L. Soeken. “Mental Health Services for Youths in Foster Care and Disabled Youths.” American Journal of Public Health 91, 7 (July 2001):
1094-1099.
Duggan, Mark G. and Melissa Schettini Kearney. “The Impact of Child SSI Enrollment on Household Outcomes.” Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 26, 4 (Autumn 2007): 861-886.
________. The Impact of Child SSI Enrollment on Household Outcomes: Evidence from the Survey of Income and Program Participation. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 11568, August 2005.
Elder, Todd and Elizabeth Powers. A Longitudinal Analysis of Entries and Exits of the Low-Income Elderly to and from the Supplemental Security Income Program.  Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 2007-156, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, October 2007.
________. “The Incredible Shrinking Program: Trends in SSI Participation of the Aged.” Research on Aging 28, 3 (May 2006): 341-358.
________. Public Health Insurance and SSI Program Participation Among the Aged. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 2006-117, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, April 2006.
________. “The Effect of Falling SSI Generosity on SSI Participation Among the Aged Since the 1970s.” Proceedings of the 98th Annual Conference on Taxation of the National Tax Association (2005): 400-406.
Favreault, Melissa M. and Douglas A. Wolf. Living Arrangements and Supplemental Security Income Receipt Among the Aged. Center for Retirement Research Working Paper No. 2004-03, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, February 2004.
Feldstein, Martin S. and Jeffrey B. Liebman eds. The Distributional Aspects of Social Security and Social Security Reform. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2002.
Fernandes, Adrienne L., Scott Szymendera, and Emilie Stolzfus. Child Welfare: Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Benefits for Children in Foster Care. Washington, DC: Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service Report No. RL33855, February 2009.
Fitzpatrick, Collen. “Report Highlights Impact of Welfare Reform on Addicted Population.” Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Weekly 15, 31 (August 2003): 1-3.
Fraker, Thomas and Anu Rangarajan. “The Social Security Administration’s Youth Transition Demonstration Projects.” Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation 30, 3 (2009): 223-240.
Gerst, Kerstin. “Supplemental Security Income Among Older Immigrants From Central and South America: The Impact of Welfare Reform.” Journal of Aging and Social Policy. 21, 3 (2009): 297-317.
Gibson, Nancy P. “SSI Rules Simplification Provides Helpful Changes.” The Exceptional Parent 35, 4 (April 2005): 64-65.
Giertz, Seth. An Examination of the Impact of Federal Disability Programs On Family Labor Supply: Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study, Center for Retirement Research Dissertation, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, May, 2001.
Gilmer, Todd, Richard Kronick, Paul Fishman, and Theodore G. Ganiats. “The Medicaid Rx Model: Pharmacy-Based Risk Adjustment for Public Programs.” Medical Care 39, 11 (November 2001): 1188-1202.
Gruber, Jonathan and Jeffrey Kubik. Health Insurance Coverage and the Disability Insurance Application Decision. Center for Retirement Research Working Paper No. 2002-04, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, September 2002.
Guydish, Joseph, Claudia Ponath, Alan Bostrom, Kevin M. Campbell, and Nancy Barron. “Effects of Losing SSI Benefits on Standard Drug and Alcohol Outcomes Measures.” Contemporary Drug Problems 30, 1-2 (Spring/Summer 2003): 169-193.
Haider, Steven J., Alison Jacknowitz, and Robert F. Schoeni. The Economic Status of Elderly Divorced Women. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 2003-046, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, May 2003.
Hanrahan, Patricia, Daniel J. Luchin, Lea Cloninger, and James Swartz. “Medicaid Eligibility of Former Supplemental Security Income Recipients with Drug or Alcoholism Disability.” American Journal of Public Health 94, 1 (January 2004): 46-47.
Hao, Lingxin and Yukio Kawano. “Immigrants’ Welfare Use and Opportunity for Contact with Co-Ethnics.” Demography 38, 3 (August 2001): 376-389.
Hemmeter, Jeffrey. “Occupations of SSI Recipients Who Work.” Social Security Bulletin 69, 3 (2009): 47-75.
Hemmeter, Jeffrey, and Elaine Gilby. “The Age-18 Redetermination and Postredetermination Participation in SSI.” Social Security Bulletin 69, 4 (2009): 1-25.
Hemmeter, Jeffrey, Jacqueline Kauff, and David Wittenburg. “Changing Circumstances: Experiences of Child SSI Recipients Before and After their Age-18 Redetermination for Adult Benefits.” Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation 30, 3 (2009): 201-221.
Herd, Pamela, Robert F. Schoeni, and James S. House. “Upstream Solutions: Does the Supplemental Security Income Program Reduce Disability in the Elderly?” The Milbank Quarterly 86, 1 (March 2008): 5-45.
Hill, Steven C. and Judith Wooldridge. “Informed Participation in TennCare by People with Disabilities.” Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved 17, 4 (November 2006): 851-875.
________. “SSI Enrollees’ Health Care in TennCare.” Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved 14, 2 (May 2003): 229-243.
________. “Plan Characteristics and SSI Enrollees’ Access to and Quality of Care in Four TennCare MCOs.” Health Services Research 37, 5 (2002): 1197-1220.
Hill, Steven C., Craig Thornton, Christopher Trenholm, and Judith Wooldridge. “Risk Selection Among SSI Enrollees in TennCare.” Inquiry 39, 2 (Summer 2002): 152-167.
Hogan, Sean R., George J. Unick, Richard Speiglman, and Jean C. Norris. “Social Welfare Policy and Public Assistance for Low-Income Substance Abusers: The Impact of 1996 Welfare Reform Legislation on the Economic Security of Former Supplemental Security Income Drug Addiction and Alcoholism Beneficiaries.” Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare 35, 1 (March 2008): 221-24.
Hunt, Sharon R. and Jim Baumohl. “Now Invited to Testify: Former Beneficiaries Appraise the SSI Drug Addiction and Alcoholism Program.” Contemporary Drug Problems 30, 1-2 (Spring/Summer 2003):
169-193.
Huynh, Minh, Kalman Rupp, and James Sears. The Assessment of Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) Benefit Data Using Longitudinal Administrative Records. SIPP Working Paper No. 238. Census Bureau, 2002.
Johnson, Richard W., Melissa M. Favreault and Corina Mommaerts. Work Ability and the Social Insurance Safety Net in the Years Prior to Retirement. Center for Retirement Research Working Paper No. 2009-28, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, November 2009.
Karoly, Lynn A. and Paul S. Davies. Impact of the 1996 Childhood Disability Reforms: Evidence from Matched SIPP-SSA Data. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 2004-079, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, June 2004.
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Koenig, Melissa and Kalman Rupp. “SSI Recipients in Households and Families with Multiple Recipients: Prevalence and Poverty Outcomes.” Social Security Bulletin 65, 2 (2003/2004): 14-27.
Kubik, Jeffrey D. “Fiscal Federalism and Welfare Policy: The Role of States in the Growth of Child SSI.” National Tax Journal 56, 1 (March 2003): 61-79.
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Lewin Group. Evaluation Design for the Ticket to Work Program: Preliminary Process Evaluation. Report prepared for the Social Security Administration. March 2003.
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________. “SSI and DI Beneficiaries with Work-Related Goals and Expectations.” Work Activity and Use of Employment Supports Under the Original Ticket to Work Regulations Report No. 5. Washington, DC: Mathematica Policy Research, 2009.
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Loprest, Pamela J. and David C. Wittenburg. Choices, Challenges, and Options: Child SSI Recipients Preparing for the Transition to Adult Life. Report prepared under contract to the Social Security Administration, May 2005.
Luchansky, Bill, Dan Fordlund, Sharon Estee, Peter Lund, Antoinette Krupski, and Kenneth Stark. “Substance Abuse Treatment and Criminal Justice Involvement for SSI Recipients: Results from Washington State.” American Journal on Addictions 15, 5 (September-October 2006): 370-379.
Luecking, Richard G. and David Wittenburg. “Providing Supports to Youth with Disabilities Transitioning to Adulthood: Case Descriptions from the Youth Transition Demonstration.” Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation 30, (2009): 241-251.
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Martinez, John, Michelle S. Manno, Peter Baird, Thomas Fraker, Todd Honeycutt, Arif Mamun, Bonnie O’Day, and Anu Rangarajan. The Social Security Administration’s Youth Transition Demonstration Projects: Profiles of the Random Assignment Projects. Report prepared under contract to the Office of Disability and Retirement Research, Social Security Administration, December 2008.
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Matherlee, Karen. Bridging Silos, Part I: Linkages among the DI, SSI, Medicare, and Medicaid Programs. National Health Policy Forum Background Paper. Washington, DC: National Health Policy Forum. November 2003.
________. Bridging Silos, Part II: DI, SSI, Medicare, and Medicaid Issues and Incentives. National Health Policy Forum Background Paper. Washington, DC: National Health Policy Forum. November 2003.
McGarry, Kathleen and Jonathan Skinner. The Long-Term Financial and Health Outcomes of Disability Insurance Applicants. Paper presented at 11th Annual Joint Conference of the Research Retirement Consortium, Washington, DC, August 10-11, 2009.
Meyer, Bruce D., Wallace K.C. Mok, and James X. Sullivan. The Under-Reporting of Transfers in Household Surveys: Its Nature and Consequences. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. NB08-12, September 2008.
Mitchell, Jean M. and Darrell J. Gaskin. “Factors Affecting Plan Choice and Unmet Need Among Supplemental Security Income Eligible Children with Disabilities.” Health Services Research 40, 5, pt. 1 (October 2005): 1379-1399.
________. “Do Children Receiving Supplemental Security Income Who Are Enrolled in Medicaid Fare Better Under a Fee-for-Service or Comprehensive Capitation Model?” Pediatrics 114, 1 (July 2004): 196-204.
Mitchell, Jean M., Darrell J. Gaskin, and Chahira Kozna. “Health Supervision Visits Among SSI-Eligible Children in the D.C. Medicaid Program: A Comparison of Enrollees in Fee-for-Service and Partially Capitated Managed Care.” Inquiry 45, 2 (Summer 2008): 198-214.
Mitchell, Susan, Colette Lamothe-Galette, and Frank Potter. Survey Response Incentives for a Low-Income Population: What Works? Mathematica Policy Research Issue Brief Number 2003-2. Princeton, NJ: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. November 2003.
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Neumark, David and Elizabeth T. Powers. “The Effects of Changes in State SSI Supplements on Pre-Retirement Labor Supply.” Public Finance Review 33, 1 (January 2005): 3-35.
________. “The Effect of the SSI Program on Labor Supply: Improved Evidence from Social Security Administrative Files.” Social Security Bulletin 65, 3 (2003/2004): 45-60.
Neumark, David, Elizabeth T. Powers, and Klaus F. Zimmermann. “Supplemental Security Income, Labor Supply, and Migration.” Journal of Population Economics 19, 3 (July 2006): 447-479.
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Norris, Jean, Richard Scott, Richard Speiglman, and Rex Green. “Homelessness, Hunger and Material Hardship Among Those Who Lost SSI.” Contemporary Drug Problems 30, 1-2 (Spring/Summer 2003): 241-273.
O'Day, Bonnie, Allison Roche, Norma Altshuler, Liz Clary, and Krista Harrison. “Process Evaluation of the Work Incentives Planning and Assistance Program.” Work Activity and Use of Employment Supports Under the Original Ticket to Work Regulations Report No. 1. Washington, DC: Mathematica Policy Research, 2009.
Ozawa, Martha N. “SSI and Adults with Disabilities.” Journal of Disability Policy Studies 13, 3 (2002): 153-162.
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Powers, Elizabeth T. and David Neumark. “The Interaction of Public Retirement Income Programs in the United States.” American Economic Review 93, 2 (May 2003): 261-265.
________. The Supplemental Security Income Program and Incentives to Claim Social Security Retirement Early: Empirical Evidence from Matched SIPP and Social Security Administrative Files. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper No. 2003-036, University of Michigan Retirement Research Center, January 2003.
________. The Supplemental Security Income Program and Incentives to Take Up Social Security Early Retirement: Empirical Evidence from Matched SIPP and Social Security Administration Files. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 8670, December 2001.
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Rangarajan, Anu, Thomas Fraker, Todd Honeycutt, Arif Mamun, John Martinez, Bonnie O’Day, and David Wittenburg. The Social Security Administration’s Youth Transition Demonstration Projects: Evaluation Design Report. Report prepared under contract to the Office of Disability and Retirement Research, Social Security Administration, January 2009.
Reichman, Nancy E., Hope Corman, and Kelly Noonan. “Effects of Child Health on Sources of Public Support.” Southern Economic Journal 73, 1 (July 2006): 136-156.
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________. “Impact of U.S. Federal Welfare Reform Law on Children with Mental Disorders Receiving SSI.” Journal of Health and Social Policy 13, 2 (2001): 1-20.
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Rogowski, Jeannette A., Lynn A. Karoly, Jacob A. Klerman, Moira Inkelas, Melissa Rowe, and Randall A. Hirscher. Final Report for Policy Evaluation of the Effect of the 1996 Welfare Reform Legislation on SSI Benefits for Disabled Children. RAND Corporation Report DRU-2559-SSA, March 2002.
Romig, Kathleen. Social Security Reform: Possible Effects on the Elderly Poor and Mitigation Options. Washington, DC: Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service Report No. RL34433, April 2008.
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Rosen, Marc I., Thomas J. McMahon, HaiQun Lin, and Robert A. Rosenheck. “Effect of Social Security Payments on Substance Abuse in a Homeless Mentally Ill Cohort.” Health Services Research 41, 1 (February 2006) 173-191.
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Rupp, Kalman, Paul S. Davies, and Alexander Strand. “Disability Benefit Coverage and Program Interactions in the Working-Age Population.” Social Security Bulletin 68, 1 (2008): 1-30.
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