Chapter 3: Do Federal Disability Insurance Participants Exaggerate Their Health Problems? A Study Using Anchoring Vignettes
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Published:2024
Kajal Lahiri, Paul Noroski, 2024. "Do Federal Disability Insurance Participants Exaggerate Their Health Problems? A Study Using Anchoring Vignettes", Essays in Honor of Subal Kumbhakar, Christopher F. Parmeter, Mike G. Tsionas, Hung-Jen Wang
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Abstract
The authors examine whether or not applicants and recipients of federal disability insurance (DI) inflate their self-assessed health (SAH) problems relative to others. To do this, the authors employ a technique which uses anchoring vignettes. This approach allows them to examine how various cohorts of the population interpret survey questions associated with subjective self-assessments of health. The results of the analysis suggest that DI participants do inflate the severity of a given health problem, but by a small but significant degree. This tendency to exaggerate the severity of disability problems is much more apparent among those with more education (especially those with a college degree). In contrast, racial minorities tend to underestimate severity ratings for a given disability vignette when compared to their white peers.
