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HARRIS
POLL - July 2003 by Humphrey Taylor American Values As and when the economy grows, most people would like to see a disproportionate share of that growth going to increased spending on healthcare, education and defense. Only a few people think that food, clothes, housing, automobiles and transportation, or leisure and entertainment should be high priorities for economic growth. These are the results of a nationwide Harris Poll of 3,462 adults surveyed online between May 19 and 27, 2003, with the same methodology used by Harris Interactive® to predict the 2000 U.S. elections with great accuracy. When asked which of eight major segments of the economy should be the highest priority for future growth, most people picked healthcare (34 percent), education (29 percent), or defense (27 percent). Very few people picked any of the other items housing (4 percent), food (3 percent), automobiles and transportation (1 percent), leisure and entertainment (less than .05 percent) or clothes (less than 0.5 percent). When people were asked to give both their first and second choices, the same three areas of spending top the list, but the gap between them widens somewhat. Fully 67 percent pick healthcare as their first or second choice, 53 percent pick education and 46 percent choose defense. Differences by
age Differences by
political philosophy A paradox A visitor from outer space who looked at these numbers might conclude that most Americans would be strongly supportive of much higher taxation to spend on healthcare, education and defense. This visitor would be puzzled by the popularity of politicians who favor tax cuts and, by implication, less money for the segments of the economy which the public believes should grow the fastest. In commenting on
these numbers, Ian Morrison, Ph.D., the well-known futurist, observed,
This is striking evidence that the American public favors more
spending on public goods like health, education and defense. Despite
recent tax cuts, politicians will continue to feel pressure to expand
these sectors. In particular, healthcare seems destined to increase
substantially as a share of the economy, not only because of the often-cited
driving forces of aging and technology, but because the public wants
increased investment in health services. The official government forecast
of healthcare taking 17 percent of GNP by 2011 may prove to be a severe
underestimate of healthcares role in the future. Humphrey Taylor
is the chairman of The Harris Poll, Harris Interactive. |
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