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What is the Actual Number of Americans Without Health Insurance
by Bonnie Erbe
CNN has a fascinating post on a question I've pondered in this space in the past: How many Americans are truly uninsured?
The number the Obama administration and Democrats have used for more than a year now ranges between 40 million and 46 million -- at the upper end, that would be somewhere between 1 in 6 and 1 in 7 Americans.
A conservative think tank, the
That study concluded that a third of the uninsured -- more than 14 million people -- qualified for existing government programs such as
Nearly 6 million were what
There are two concerns that force one to question the value of the PRI figure:
1. Those 2003 figures are quite old at this point and do not take the recession into account.
2. Hypothesizing about what low-wage workers "could do" if tax laws were changed is a bit too "iffy" to count these people as insured for statistical purposed.
Citing that research and other census data, PRI President Sally Pipes argued in a widely circulated 2008 opinion piece that only 8 million people -- just under 3 percent of the U.S. population -- are "chronically uninsured."
Still, even the 46 million figure currently cited by Democrats has one major hole of its own.
They rely on
But the
And according to its findings, "The bulk of the uninsured are U.S. citizens, they're from working families, but they have low incomes and would likely have trouble affording private coverage," she said.
The latest
In my own limited and very anecdotal experience, I have encountered a handful of people whose personal income could indeed have made way for the purpose of purchasing health insurance coverage, but who chose not to. That's why different perspectives are helpful in this debate, if one weighs all the factors driving the differing perspectives.
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