Gas prices top concerns over jobs, health
44 percent of survey participants say gas is a ‘serious problem’
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D.C. church pumps free gas April 29: A Washington, D.C., church gives away 700 gallons of gasoline to motorists willing to wait in line. NBC News Channel |
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WASHINGTON - Paying for gasoline easily tops the list of economic woes facing families in the United States, according to a survey on how changes in the economy have affected people’s lives.
About 44 percent of survey participants said paying for gasoline was a “serious problem” for them. Across all income levels, the cost of gas was the most frequently cited economic concern. The price of gas nationally averaged $3.60 a gallon on Monday, according to the Energy Department.
More than a quarter of households earning more than $75,000 a year described paying for gasoline as a serious problem. For those with incomes of less than $30,000, about 63 percent felt that way.
In a distant second and third place among participants’ economic concerns were: getting a good-paying job or raise, 29 percent; and paying for health care and health insurance, 28 percent.
Following in fourth place was difficulty paying rent or mortgage, 19 percent.
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Many participants in the survey, nearly three in 10, said they put off or postponed getting health care they needed in the past year. Nearly a quarter of participants skipped a recommended test or treatment. Nearly the same number didn’t fill a prescription.
The survey of 2,003 adults was conducted April 3-13 on behalf of the Kaiser Family Foundation, which conducts health research. The survey’s margin of sampling error was plus or minus 3 percentage points.
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