United Nations
Fact sheet on Persons with Disabilities
Overview
Around 10 per cent of the world's population, or 650 million people, live
with a disability. They are the world's largest minority.
This figure is increasing through population growth, medical advances and
the ageing process, says the World Health Organization (WHO).
In countries with life expectancies over 70 years, individuals spend on
average about 8 years, or 11.5 per cent of their life span, living with
disabilities.
Eighty per cent of persons with disabilities live in developing countries,
according to the UN Development Programme (UNDP).
Disability rates are significantly higher among groups with lower
educational attainment in the countries of the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD), says the OECD Secretariat. On
average, 19 per cent of less educated people have disabilities, compared
to 11 per cent among the better educated.
In most OECD countries, women report higher incidents of disability than
men.
The World Bank estimates that 20 per cent of the world's poorest people
have some kind of disability, and tend to be regarded in their own
communities as the most disadvantaged.
Women with disabilities are recognized to be multiply disadvantaged,
experiencing exclusion on account of their gender and their disability.
Women and girls with disabilities are particularly vulnerable to abuse. A
small 2004 survey in Orissa, India, found that virtually all of the women
and girls with disabilities were beaten at home, 25 per cent of women with
intellectual disabilities had been raped and 6 per cent of women with
disabilities had been forcibly sterilized.
According to UNICEF, 30 per cent of street youths have some kind of
disability.
Mortality for children with disabilities may be as high as 80 per cent in
countries where under-five mortality as a whole has decreased below 20
per cent, says the United Kingdom's Department for International
Development, adding that in some cases it seems as if children are being
"weeded out".
Comparative studies on disability legislation shows that only 45 countries
have anti-discrimination and other disability-specific laws.
In the United Kingdom, 75 per cent of the companies of the FTSE 100
Index on the London Stock Exchange do not meet basic levels of web
accessibility, thus missing out on more than $147 million in revenue.
Education
Ninety per cent of children with disabilities in developing countries do not
attend school, says UNESCO.
The global literacy rate for adults with disabilities is as low as 3 per cent,
and 1 per cent for women with disabilities, according to a 1998 UNDP
study.
In the OECD countries, students with disabilities in higher education
remain under-represented, although their numbers are on the increase,
says the OECD.
Employment
An estimated 386 million of the world's working-age people have some
kind of disability, says the International Labour Organization (ILO).
Unemployment among the persons with disabilities is as high as 80 per
cent in some countries. Often employers assume that persons with
disabilities are unable to work.
Even though persons with disabilities constitute a significant 5 to 6 per
cent of India's population, their employment needs remain unmet, says a
study by India's National Centre for Promotion of Employment for Disabled
People, in spite of the "People with Disabilities" Act, which reserves for
them 3 per cent of government jobs. Of the some 70 million persons with
disabilities in India, only about 100,000 have succeeded in obtaining
employment in industry.
A 2004 United States survey found that only 35 per cent of working-age
persons with disabilities are in fact working, compared to 78 per cent of
those without disabilities. Two-thirds of the unemployed respondents with
disabilities said they would like to work but could not find jobs.
A 2003 study by Rutgers University found that people with physical and
mental disabilities continue to be vastly underrepresented in the U.S.
workplace. One-third of the employers surveyed said that persons with
disabilities cannot effectively perform the required job tasks. The second
most common reason given for not hiring persons with disabilities was the
fear of costly special facilities.
A U.S. survey of employers conducted in 2003 found that the cost of
accommodations was only $500 or less; 73 per cent of employers
reported that their employees did not require special facilities at all.
Companies report that employees with disabilities have better retention
rates, reducing the high cost of turnover, says a 2002 U.S. study. Other
American surveys reveal that after one year of employment, the retention
rate of persons with disabilities is 85 per cent.
Thousands of persons with disabilities have been successful as small
business owners, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. The 1990
national census revealed that persons with disabilities have a higher rate
of self-employment and small business experience (12.2 per cent) than
persons without disabilities (7.8 per cent).
Violence
For every child killed in warfare, three are injured and acquire a
permanent form of disability.
In some countries, up to a quarter of disabilities result from injuries and
violence, says WHO.
Persons with disabilities are more likely to be victims of violence or rape,
according to a 2004 British study, and less likely to obtain police
intervention, legal protection or preventive care.
Research indicates that violence against children with disabilities occurs at
annual rates at least 1.7 times greater than for their peers without
disabilities.