受过教育的美国黑人对社会保障的依赖高于预期:少数族裔在2023年全国健康访谈调查(NHIS)中的回报减少。

Journal of biomedical and life sciences Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-10 DOI:10.31586/jbls.2025.1145
Shervin Assari, Amanda Sonnega, Babak Najand, Hossein Zare
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:虽然受教育程度通常与减少对社会保障和残疾福利的依赖有关,但少数族裔收益递减理论表明,受教育程度的社会经济效益在种族群体中并不是均匀分布的,在少数族裔群体中更弱。本研究探讨了美国黑人和白人成年人受教育程度与对社会保障和残疾福利的依赖之间的关系。目的:在mdr框架的基础上,我们分析了来自2023年全国健康访谈调查(NHIS)的数据,以研究受教育程度如何影响黑人和白人成年人对社会保障残疾收入、残疾福利和公共援助的依赖。方法:我们使用了来自NHIS 2023数据集的具有全国代表性的黑人和白人成年人样本。评估结果依赖于三个收入来源:(1)社会保障残疾收入,(2)残疾福利收入,(3)公共援助残疾收入。受教育程度被分为三个等级:低于高中(参考),高中文凭到一些大学,大学毕业或以上。逻辑回归模型评估了受教育程度和对每种收入来源的依赖之间的关系,并对黑人和白人成年人进行了单独分析,以评估差异效应。结果:较高的教育程度(高中文凭到一些大学和大学毕业生或更高)与依赖社会保障残疾、残疾福利和公共援助的几率较低相关。然而,受教育程度对白人成年人的保护作用明显强于黑人成年人。在成年黑人中,即使受教育程度高,在减少对这些收入来源的依赖方面也显示出有限的效果,这凸显了少数族裔收益递减(mdr)现象。结论:虽然受教育程度降低了对社会保障和残疾相关收入来源的依赖,但与白人成年人相比,这些保护作用对黑人成年人的影响不那么明显。研究结果揭示了教育的经济回报中持续存在的种族差异,表明结构性因素可能会破坏美国黑人教育成就的社会经济和健康效益。可能需要有针对性的政策干预来改善黑人成年人的经济稳定性,包括那些受过高等教育的人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Higher-than Expected Social Security Reliance Among Educated Black Americans: Minorities' Diminished Returns in National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) 2023.

Background: While educational attainment is generally associated with reduced reliance on Social Security and disability benefits, Minorities' Diminished Returns (MDRs) theory suggests that the socioeconomic benefits of educational attainment are not equally distributed across racial groups and are weaker for minoritized populations. This study explores the association between educational attainment and reliance on Social Security and disability benefits among Black and White adults in the United States.

Objective: Building on the MDRs framework, we analyzed data from the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) 2023 to examine how educational attainment impacts reliance on Social Security disability income, disability benefits, and public assistance for Black and White adults.

Methods: We used a nationally representative sample of Black and White adults from the NHIS 2023 dataset. The outcomes assessed were reliance on three income sources: (1) Social Security disability income, (2) disability benefit income, and (3) public assistance disability income. Educational attainment was classified into three levels: less than high school (reference), high school diploma to some college, and college graduate or more. Logistic regression models assessed the relationship between educational attainment and reliance on each income source, with separate analyses for Black and White adults to evaluate differential effects.

Results: Higher levels of educational attainment (high school diploma to some college and college graduate or more) were associated with lower odds of relying on Social Security disability, disability benefits, and public assistance. However, the protective effects of educational attainment were notably stronger for White adults than for Black adults. Among Black adults, even high educational attainment showed limited effectiveness in reducing reliance on these income sources, underscoring the Minorities' Diminished Returns (MDRs) phenomenon.

Conclusions: Although educational attainment reduces reliance on Social Security and disability-related income sources, these protective effects are less pronounced for Black adults compared to White adults. The findings reveal persistent racial disparities in the economic returns of education, suggesting that structural factors may undermine the socioeconomic and health benefits of educational achievement for Black Americans. Targeted policy interventions may be needed to improve economic stability for Black adults, including those with higher educational credentials.

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