Even
as U.S. economic opportunity falls, study finds broader gains
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[June 24, 2014]
By Moriah Costa
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Economic
opportunity has dropped in the United States over the past 40 years, but
a broader gauge of opportunity incorporating crime, education and
healthcare has been on the rise, according to a study released on
Tuesday.
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The study released by advocacy group Opportunity Nation and
research group Measure of America showed that opportunity increased
13 percent from 1970 to 2010, even as economic opportunity decreased
by 22 percent.
"I think that the important thing to recognize is that opportunity
is more than just the unemployment rate," said Mark Edwards,
executive director of Opportunity Nation, a bipartisan group that
seeks to expand economic mobility.
"Access to education is important, access to healthcare is
important. These are all pieces that are critical to opportunity,"
he said.
The study measured data from a variety of government sources to
determine a measure of success in each state and Washington, D.C.,
in terms of economics, education and community life. The study took
into account a range of factors from access to healthcare to
household income and violent crime.
It found that educational opportunity rose by 80 percent and
community opportunity increased by 20 percent, more than offsetting
the decline in terms of economics.
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The slow recovery from the 2007-2009 recession weighed on the
measure of economic opportunity, as did a 30 percent increase in
income inequality and a 12 percent rise in poverty.
Based on the broad measure, however, almost every state has seen
opportunity increase over the past four decades, with the biggest
gain in Virginia. Only Nevada and Michigan registered declines.
(Reporting by Moriah Costa; Editing by Leslie Adler and Lisa
Shumaker)
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