Publication | Closed Access
Federal Budgetary Costs of Blindness
98
Citations
7
References
1992
Year
Public PolicyFederal TaxHealth PolicyHealth EconomicsBlindsightDisabilityHealth InsuranceEducationHealth Care CostFinancial ProtectionPublic HealthFederal ExpendituresVisual ImpairmentVisual DisabilityFederal Budgetary CostsFederal Cost
Federal expenditures for blindness-related disability among Americans are examined. The government, rather than the private sector, frequently bears the economic consequences of visual disability through entitlement and public assistance programs. Findings suggest an average $11,896 federal cost of a person-year of blindness for a working-aged American, which includes income assistance programs (SSDI/SSI), health insurance programs (Medicare/Medicaid), and tax losses resulting from reduced potential earnings. Almost 97 percent of the aggregate annual federal costs of blindness in 1990, which totaled approximately $4 billion, is accounted for by working-aged adults, who represent less than one-third of the total blind population. Approximately 25 percent of all blindness is attributed to preventable causes.
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