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Intellectual disability and autism: Socioeconomic impacts of informal caring, projected to 2030

journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-08, 05:24 authored by D Schofield, MJB Zeppel, R Tanton, JL Veerman, SJ Kelly, ME Passey, RN Shrestha
BackgroundIntellectual disability and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) influence the interactions of a person with their environment and generate economic and socioeconomic costs for the person, their family and society.AimsTo estimate costs of lost workforce participation due to informal caring for people with intellectual disability or autism spectrum disorders by estimating lost income to individuals, lost taxation payments to federal government and increased welfare payments.MethodWe used a microsimulation model based on the Australian Bureau of Statistics' Surveys of Disability, Ageing and Carers (population surveys of people aged 15–64), and projected costs of caring from 2015 in 5-year intervals to 2030.ResultsThe model estimated that informal carers of people with intellectual disability and/or ASD in Australia had aggregated lost income of AU$310 million, lost taxation of AU$100 million and increased welfare payments of AU$204 million in 2015. These are projected to increase to AU$432 million, AU$129 million and AU$254 million for income, taxation, and welfare respectively by 2030. The income gap of carers for people with intellectual disability and/or ASD is estimated to increase by 2030, meaning more financial stress for carers.ConclusionsInformal carers of people with intellectual disability and/or ASD experience significant loss of income, leading to increased welfare payments and reduced taxation revenue for governments; these are all projected to increase. Strategic policies supporting informal carers wishing to return to work could improve the financial and psychological impact of having a family member with intellectual disability and/or ASD.Declaration of interestNone.

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  1. 1.

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

British Journal of Psychiatry

Volume

215

Article number

PII S0007125019002046

Pagination

654-660

ISSN

0007-1250

eISSN

1472-1465

Issue

5

Publisher

Cambridge University Press