For an in-depth discussion of employment and demographics, please review this 2017 edition of the Research Navigator which discusses employment data. Also read Disability Employment Research: Key Takeaways.

The Current Population Survey (CPS)

The CPS is a monthly survey of a representative sample of the civilian, noninstitutionalized population ages 16 and up, not including U.S. Territories.

To understand employment statistics, you need to know the meaning of some important terms. Refer to the Employment Terms section of our Key Definitions of Statistical Terms page for definitions of terms used in the statistics below.

Tables:

In the following tables, numbers not in parentheses are estimates for people with visual impairment. Numbers in parentheses are estimates for people without visual impairments.

Annual Labor Force Participation Rate (based on March CPS)1


2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

Ages 16-64

45% (75%)

44% (74%)

38% (73%)

40% (74%)

41% (74%)

43% (74%)

39% (74%)

34% (73%)

Ages 16+

25% (62%)

26% (63%)

21% (62%)

23% (63%)

24% (64%)

25% (64%)

23% (64%)

19% (64%)


Annual Employment Population Ratio by Sex (based on March CPS): Ages 16-641


2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

Females ages 16-64

42% (68%)

42% (67%)

32% (65%)

35% (66%)

34% (67%)

37% (66%)

31% (66%)

28% (65%)

Males ages 16-64

40% (76%)

37% (76%)

38% (73%)

39% (75%)

40% (76%)

39% (76%)

37% (75%)

30% (74%)


Annual Employment Population Ratio by Sex (based on March CPS): Ages 16 and up1


2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

Females ages 16 and up

23% (56%)

23% (56%)

17% (54%)

18% (55%)

19% (56%)

20% (56%)

17% (56%)

15% (55%)

Males ages 16 and up

24% (66%)

24% (66%)

23% (63%)

24% (65%)

25% (66%)

26% (66%)

23% (66%)

19% (66%)


Unemployment Rates

The unemployment rate, as calculated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), is the percentage of the total labor force that is unemployed but actively seeking employment and willing to work. Since the unemployment rate is calculated as a fraction of the labor force, it does not count individuals who are considered "not in the labor force" - those who are not looking for work, whether they never sought employment, they left the workforce for retirement, or they dropped out of the workforce because of disability or long-term unemployment (Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2017).

In 2023, 8% of people age 16-64 with vision difficulty were unemployed, compared with 4% of people ages 16-64 without vision difficulty.

  1. Data source: The data on this page come from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Current Population Survey (CPS), CPS Basic Monthly data, which can be accessed using the Census Bureau’s microdata exploration tools. The CPS asks the same question about visual impairment which is asked in the Census Bureau's American Community Survey: is the person blind or does he/she "have serious difficulty seeing, even when wearing glasses?"