|
From Economic Policy Institute:
The number of people in the United States without any type of health insurance continued its steady climb in 2006, to 47 million uninsured.
The share of the population without health coverage has grown over 2 percentage points since 2000, from 13.7% in 2000 to 15.8% in 2006 (See Included Chart).
Some analysts have argued that this increase is driven by the fact that there are more immigrants living in the United States, and that immigrants are less likely than native-born people to have health insurance.
While both of these facts are true (the share of the foreign-born population increased 1.2 percentage points from 2000 to 2006, and the share of immigrants without health insurance was 20 percentage points higher over this period than that of native-born people), these facts are not driving the overall decline in coverage.
For one thing, the percent uninsured increased over this period at roughly the same rate among the native-born (up 1.8 percentage points) and immigrants (up 2.0 percentage points).
The conclusion is clear: immigration is not the driving force behind the continued erosion of health insurance in this country.
Read more from this post.
Posted on November 4, 2007 9:19 PM
Untitled Document
News from Leading Foundations
| Foundation News |
Government News |
Children News |
| Youth News |
Community Building News |
Education
News |
| Civic Engagement News |
Health News |
Arts News |
| Environmental News |
|
|
|