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October 30, 2006

Premiums versus Paychecks: A Growing Burden for New York’s Workers

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Throughout the first six years of the new millennium, health care costs have skyrocketed, while working families’ wages have stood still. Other factors have also buffeted families’ economic well-being, including fluctuating gasoline prices and the recent downturn in real estate markets, but nothing has caused as much damage to family pocketbooks as the confluence of stagnant wages and rising health care costs. Numerous national studies have documented this damage. As important as these studies are, they do not reflect the varying burdens experienced by families in different states. Just as labor markets, health systems, and economic circumstances vary from one state to another, the consequences of rising health care costs and stagnant earnings differ considerably among the 50 states. Families USA has undertaken the first state-by-state analysis of growing health care premiums versus stagnant earnings over the past six years. This report, which is based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Department of Labor, and the Department of Health and Human Services, examines the impact of changes in employer-based health insurance premiums and earnings in New York.

Posted by Gary Holden at October 30, 2006 4:10 AM