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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Rat dog micro-cap picks...

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To: tsigprofit who wrote (14269)9/30/2003 10:14:40 AM
From: Bucky Katt  Read Replies (3) of 48461
 
Of course, when there are no new jobs, just cuts, and the remaining bastards have to work their balls off to take up the slack, things ain't lookin' so good...
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Consumer Confidence Drops
Amid Labor-Market Worries

DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

NEW YORK -- Consumer confidence tumbled in September, erasing the bounce recorded during August, amid concerns about the labor market.

The Conference Board said Tuesday its consumer-confidence index fell to 76.8, its lowest level since November 1993, from a revised 81.7 in August. WOWIE!!!!!

"The lack of improvement in labor-market conditions continues to dampen consumers' spirits," said Lynn Franco, Conference Board director.

The present-situation index, a gauge of consumers' assessment of current economic conditions, fell to 59.5 from a revised 62 in August. Consumer expectations for the state of economic activity over the next six months fell to 88.4 from a revised 94.9.

Updated September 30, 2003 10:07 a.m.
________________________________Pile on>>

Number of Americans Who Lack
Health-Care Coverage Is Rising

Census Bureau Counts 43.6 Million
As Employer-Based Plans Shrink
By SARA SCHAEFER and LAURIE MCGINLEY
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

WASHINGTON -- The federal government says 43.6 million Americans lacked health insurance last year. That's more than the population of the nation's 24 smallest states plus the District of Columbia, and it adds fuel to a growing debate about both the cost and availability of health care.

The figures, released early Tuesday by the U.S. Census Bureau, show that 15.2% of Americans didn't have coverage for all of last year, an increase of 2.4 million people from 2001, when 14.6% were uninsured.

The 5.8% rise in the uninsured resulted from a decline in the percentage of people covered by employer-based insurance -- 61.3% last year, down from 62.6% the year before. That deterioration, economists say, reflected increases in unemployment and the rise in health-care costs, which prompted some employers to drop coverage.

The size of the increase in the uninsured surprised many analysts. "Even in the mid-'90s when the number of uninsured went up, it wasn't going up this much," says John Holahan, director of the health policy research center at the Urban Institute.

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"This issue, just as in 1991 and 1992, will get more and more attention" as next year's presidential election approaches, predicts Chris Jennings, who was President Clinton's White House health adviser. The Census Bureau's report comes on the heels of another Bureau survey showing that the number of Americans living in poverty increased by 1.7 million last year.

The report on the uninsured shows that young adults were less likely than any other age group to have health insurance. Last year, 29.6% went without, up from 28.1% the year before. Health analysts attribute the increase to decisions by young, healthy workers to opt out of employer-sponsored health plans as employee contributions rise. In addition, they say, some younger workers couldn't find jobs because of economic conditions. (See a related article.)

A new study by Towers Perrin, a benefits-consulting firm, indicates that employers' health-care costs are expected to rise 12% next year, marking the fifth year in a row of double-digit percentage increases and a doubling in costs since 1999.

Meanwhile, the Census Bureau says, the percentage of people covered by government programs -- primarily Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor and disabled, and the State Children's Health Insurance Program -- rose to 25.7% last year from 25.3% the year before.

The rate of uninsured Hispanics was 32.4% last year, higher than any other racial or ethnic group, the Census Bureau says. The figure was unchanged from the previous year. The rate for foreign-born individuals was 33.4%, more than double the 12.8% rate for people born in the U.S. The uninsured rate for children remained stable at 11.6%.

Among the millions of people who lost health insurance in 2002 were Ivory and Ellis Linville of Denver, Colo. When Mr. Linville was laid off from a battery factory in December 2002, the two were left without health coverage. Both Linvilles have severe hypertension and must pay for their medicine out of Mr. Linville's unemployment insurance of $740 a month.

Almost all the major Democratic candidates have developed extensive -- and expensive -- plans to reduce the ranks of the uninsured. Their proposals include expanding government programs for low-income Americans and providing tax credits to individuals and employers to make policies more affordable.

Monday, Jano Cabrera, a spokesman for the presidential campaign of Sen. Joseph Lieberman, a Connecticut Democrat, said it was "outrageous" that so many Americans lack health insurance. With several Democratic challengers offering plans to lower the number, he added, "Today, it is only the President who lacks any type of plan whatsoever to address what is clearly a continuous and growing problem in the country."

President Bush, as part of his budget, proposed a more limited initiative -- spending $89 billion in tax credits over 10 years to help those without insurance buy coverage.

In California, meanwhile, the question of health insurance is roiling an already tumultuous political environment. The legislature recently passed a bill, backed strongly by labor unions, that would require many businesses to provide health insurance to workers. But Gov. Gray Davis still hasn't signed the legislation, which is strongly opposed by businesses because of its cost.

Imposing such an employer mandate, which was also part of the failed Clinton health-reform plan, is "shooting yourself in the foot," says Stuart Butler, vice president for domestic policy at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative Washington, D.C., think tank. He says that if companies are required to provide increasingly pricey coverage, "they're going to decide to buy a computer instead of hiring somebody."
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