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Live Coverage Of The First Democratic Debate
31.2 Percent Of Non-Citizen Immigrants Are Uninsured
Candidates are talking about undocumented immigrants and health care right now. The undocumented don’t qualify for Medicaid (except in a few states like California, where DREAMers qualify), and aren’t allowed to buy insurance on the health insurance exchanges that were created by Obamacare. Of the 33 million people without insurance in 2014, 7 million were non-citizen immigrants (the majority of them undocumented). It’s one of the most uninsured groups in the country.
A College Degree Is Rapidly Becoming The Price Of Entry In the Job Market
Bernie Sanders says that a college degree has become what a high-school diploma was in the middle of the 20th century. He isn’t far off. In the 1970s, about a third of American adults (ages 25-64) had less than a high school diploma; another third had a diploma and no more; and the remainder had at least a few college credits. Only about 6 percent had a bachelor’s degree or more. (All data is from the Current Population Survey, via IPUMS.)
Today, just 10 percent of Americans have less than a diploma, and a third have a bachelor’s degree. Well over half of American adults have at least a few college credits. And although some question the value of a college degree, it still carries clear advantages in the labor force. Americans 25 and up with a bachelor’s degree have an unemployment rate of 2.5 percent, versus 7.9 percent for those with less than a high school diploma.
Hillary Clinton is right that Social Security is particularly important to women. That’s a matter of life expectancy: Women, on average, outlive men. According to the Social Security Administration, women make up 56 percent of all beneficiaries ages 62 and up, and two-thirds of beneficiaries ages 85 and up. Unmarried women 65 and older are also less likely than unmarried men 65 and older to get income from pensions other than Social Security.
