In Greater Manchester the inactivity disability gap is 19.4% and has narrowed since baseline (November 2015/16) by 3.3%. The cause of this is not simply decreasing inactivity, it has been driven by an increase in inactivity amongst those with no long term limiting disabilities (+3.4%) and no change in inactivity rates amongst those with long term limiting disabilities (0.0%).

Line graph showing inactivity over time by disability status

Borough Comparison

Greater Manchester has a smaller disability inactivity gap than England and eight of the ten boroughs also have a smaller disability inactivity gap than England (19.6%), Wigan and Salford are the two exceptions with disability inactivity gaps of 28.8% and 12.5% respectively. Since November 2015/16 nine of the ten boroughs have narrowed the inactivity gap, Wigan is the only area to have seen the gap grow (+5.4%), Trafford and Tameside have both closed the gap by over 10%, 10.1% and 10.8% respectively.

Bar graph showing the disability inactivity gap across England, GM and the ten boroughs

Disability and other factors

We know that numerous factors intersect and compound the differences we see in activity levels amongst different cohorts. As such it is important to not look at demographics in isolation.

Age

Overall the inactivity age gap in Greater Manchester is 27.8%, however, amongst those with a disability it is 41.5%. Whilst inactivity is relatively similar amongst young adults (16 to 34 year olds), inactivity levels start to diverge significantly in middle age, with the gap growing by 15.6% from 16 to 34 year olds to 35 to 54 year olds.

Bar graph showing inactivity by age and disability status

Gender

Whilst the gender gap overall for Greater Manchester is 2.3% there is less variance in relation to disability status; the gender gap amongst those with a long term limiting disability is 0.2%. Whilst the female disability gap is 18.4% the male disability gap is 19.6%, this is just a 1.2% difference.

Bar graph showing inactivity by gender and disability status

Disability and education level

A persons level of education and corresponding qualifications also has a relationship with their activity levels. For those with no long term limiting disabilities inactivity declines as the level of education increases. However, for those with a long term limiting disability there is no difference in inactivity rates at the higher level of qualifications; inactivity rates are the same for those with level three qualifications (A-level) and level four or above qualifications (certificate of higher education), at 31.2%. At all qualification levels, people with a long term limiting disability are more inactive than those without a long term limiting disability.

Horizontal bar graph showing inactivity by disability status and qualification level. The highest rates of inactivity are amongst those with no qualifications

N.B. There was insufficient data to explore Level 1 and equivalents and Other qualifications.

Employment Status

Although there is only a small difference (2.2%) in inactivity amongst those with no disability who are unemployed, 35.3%, or retired, 33.0%, the variance is much greater amongst those with a disability; the gap here is 16.2%. However, we know that the disability gap grows with age and this is likely reflected in the large difference amongst those who are retired.

Bar chart showing inactivity by working and disability status

Activity Alliance offer further information on the experiences of people with disabilities and long term health conditions and how to engage them in physical activity.

More information on the latest Active Lives release can be found here. Find out more about the relationship between disability, long term health conditions and physical activity here.

If you have questions about this data please email: [email protected]

All data is rounded to one decimal point.

Published June 2021