On Wed, 4 Oct 2023 02:53:20 -0000 (UTC), Retrograde <
[email protected]d> wrote:
a. many, impoverished children and women who die in childbirth
Sidebar
A grim trend among Americans without college degrees exposes an
enormous failure
The life expectancy gap between working class and more educated
Americans is widening.
When people talk about the difference between the haves and the
have-nots, they're typically thinking about wealth. But in America
there's another metric that divides the two: longevity.
As Princeton economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton show in their new
research, the gulf in life expectancy between people with and without
a college degree has widened dramatically since the 1990s. As of the
end of 2021, there was a shocking 8.5-year age gap between the two
cohorts, with the life span of Americans without a college degree
trending sharply downward in recent years.
It is this grim trend of shortening life expectancy among Americans
without college degrees that explains why the U.S.'s mortality rate is
a stark outlier among rich nations, far lower than countries such as
Japan and Switzerland. "If all Americans had the life expectancy of
those who are college educated, the United States would have been one
of the best performers among the rich countries in terms of life
expectancy, not the worst," wrote Case and Deaton in a recent op-ed
explaining their findings in The New York Times. "It is the experience
of those without college degrees that accounts for America's failure."
https://www.msnbc.com/opinion/msnbc-opinion/college-degree-life-expectancy-rcna118571
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