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Showing blog posts tagged with health

State-by-State: Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid

Find your state at www.aflcio.org/statefactsheets

We have five weeks to tell Congress to let the Bush tax cuts for the richest 2% expire and reject any benefit cuts to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. Visit  www.aflcio.org/ProtectOurFuture  for all the information you need on the upcoming budget showdown. 

Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid aren't just numbers on a budget line, they're vital family protection lifelines for working people. 

Did you know  55.4 million Americans  across the United States receive monthly Social Security checks, including 8.6 million workers with disabilities and 4.4 million children? A total of  48.7 million Americans  get their health care coverage from Medicare and  64.4 million  Americans get their health care coverage from Medicaid, including 29.8 million children and 4.2 million seniors.

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Bernstein: Inequality and Budget Deficits—Why Is Only the Latter an Emergency?

Source: Piketty and Saez, 2012, link in the blog.

" Inequality and Budget Deficits: Why Is Only the Latter an Emergency ?" is a cross-post from Jared Bernstein's On the Economy blog. 

I just read two  sweeping   reports  on the state of income inequality in the U.S. (the second link focuses on state-level inequality) and other advanced economies.  Perhaps it’s because I’ve been so ensconced in fiscal cliff discussions, but I was struck by how much more alarmed policymakers are by the budget deficit than by the inequality situation. There are reasons for that tilt—some good, some bad—but based on magnitudes of the problem, it’s far from clear that our current sole policy focus is warranted.

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Controlling Rising Health Care Costs: Medicare Is the Solution, Not the Problem

Controlling Rising Health Care Costs: Medicare Is the Solution, Not the Problem

This is a cross-post from The Huffington Post , by Joe Baker, president of the Medicare Rights Center .

Although Election Day is behind us, Medicare remains on working people's minds. Medicare ranked third to the economy and federal deficit as an issue of extreme importance in deciding how people voted. For months now, pundits, candidates and policymakers have wrestled one another about Medicare's future. Taking place at town hall meetings and on editorial pages, these battles were mostly waged in fiscal terms. Medicare's sustainability, the fiscal slope and the cost of insuring the Baby Boomers are hot topics for debate. Attention will now turn from the candidates' promises to their actual proposals.

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Waiter, There’s a Germ in My Soup

Next time you’re sitting down at your favorite restaurant, you may be getting an unordered side of germs with that cheeseburger or maybe unexpected exposure to the latest flu virus with that healthy garden salad. Why? Because, as this new video from the Restaurant Opportunities Centers ( ROC ) United illustrates, 90% of all restaurant workers have no paid sick days .

 

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America's Workers of All Generations Say 'No Benefit Cuts' to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid

Some legislators and their friends on Wall Street are set on reaching a “grand bargain” during the post-election "lame duck" session of Congress that would cut the benefits that we and our children will depend on. They want to raise the retirement age for Social Security and Medicare, cut our Social Security Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA)and cut Medicaid, which could force families into bankruptcy when a loved one needs long-term care. 

Watch the video in the post, " Tell Congress: No Benefit Cuts to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid ," then  sign this petition to tell them why Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are important to you.

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No, Republicans Have Not Changed Their Tune on Taxes

No, Republicans Have Not Changed Their Tune On Taxes

Some news outlets have suggested that Republicans have changed their position on taxes after their resounding defeat on Tuesday. This is not the case. Republicans are still demanding lower tax rates for the richest 2% of Americans, paid for by cuts to Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare.

Yesterday, the Republican Speaker of the House, John Boehner, said that Republicans are “willing to accept new revenue under the right conditions.” But this is the same position Republicans have staked out for more than a year.

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Nearly 70,000 Retirees Join Vice President Biden on Medicare, Social Security

Nearly 70,000 Retirees Join Vice President Biden on  Medicare, Social Security

Nearly 70,000 members of the Alliance for Retired Americans joined a call this week with Vice President Joe Biden to learn more about the Obama administration’s commitment to keeping Medicare and Social Security strong for future generations. The call was organized by the Alliance.

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USW Warns Great Salt Lake Project Poses Environmental Dangers

A plan by  the major mineral company , Great Salt Lake Minerals Corp., with ties to a  Louisiana salt mine  (North American Salt Co.), to expand its mineral extraction production at the Great Salt Lake, poses a threat to Utah’s Great Salt Lake ecosystem, says the United Steelworkers ( USW ).

North American Salt Co. also has a  record of safety and health violations  (enter Mine ID 1600358, to view to view violations) and  unfair labor practices .  

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Eight Facts You Need to Know on Health Care

Photo Credit: Neil Parekh/SEIU Healthcare 775NW

Arm yourself with these eight facts on health care, Medicare, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act:

1.  We have a health care cost problem, not a Medicare or Medicaid problem.  Health care costs overall, including through employment-based plans, individual coverage and Medicare and Medicaid, have been growing faster than the whole economy—2.4% greater on average since 1970. Between 2000 and 2010, workers’ contributions to premiums for health insurance at work jumped 147%, compared to just a 36% increase in workers’ earnings. See " Medicare, Medicaid and the Deficit Debate ," a report from the Urban Institute.

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Social Security COLA at Risk with Chained CPI Proposals

NWLCChainedCPI

The chain CPI formula calculation would further erode Social Security benefits.

Today's announcement that Social Security recipients will receive a modest increase (1.7%) in their cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) was a small but welcome boost for seniors who are seeing prices increase on necessities, from health care to food. However, even this modest increase could be jeopardized if proposals floating around in Washington to "tweak" the current COLA formula by tying it to the so-called "chained CPI" are passed. 

Senior advocates and retirement experts say the current formula, the CPI-W, is already inadequate. Higher health care costs and expenses seniors face are not accurately addressed in the CPI-W.

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It’s been four years since low-wage workers got a raise. Sign the petition to tell Congress it’s time to raise the minimum wage.

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