Autism and Employment: From Recruitment to Career Growth
The Employment Gap
Despite evidence that autistic employees bring exceptional skills to the workplace, the employment figures remain stark:
- UK: Only 29% of autistic adults are in any form of employment (ONS, 2021) — the lowest of any disability group
- US: 85% of autistic college graduates are unemployed or underemployed (Drexel University, 2017)
- Australia: Approximately 38% of autistic working-age adults are employed (ABS, 2018)
The gap is not caused by inability to work. It is caused by recruitment processes designed around neurotypical communication norms, workplaces that do not accommodate sensory needs, and employer misconceptions about autism.
Understanding Autism in the Workplace
Autism is a spectrum of neurodevelopmental conditions characterised by differences in:
- Social communication: Processing social cues, small talk, indirect language, and unwritten workplace rules
- Sensory processing: Heightened or reduced sensitivity to light, sound, smell, touch, and taste
- Routine and predictability: Strong preference for consistency and advance notice of changes
- Information processing: Often detail-oriented, systematic, and pattern-focused