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Nearly 60 percent of working Americans are not happy with the country's economic situation, according to a new Labor Day poll conducted by Peter D. Hart Research for the AFL-CIO. Healthcare, concern about jobs going overseas and gas prices top their list of concerns. People are most upset about declining real wages and the ensuing decline in the standard of living. A record 53 percent of working people say their family's income is falling behind the cost of living. More than half say they're not doing better than their parents did at the same age. The cost of healthcare costs tops the list of problems working people say they face today. Fifty percent of working people say they personally worry very or somewhat often about not being able to afford healthcare. Americans are also worried about what healthcare costs are doing to the country. In fact, 73 percent say establishing a national healthcare system should be a top or high priority for Congress and the president. Working Americans want good jobs but say they're increasingly hard to find. Just 39 percent of workers report that they have a job that is full time, have health coverage from their employers and a retirement plan where the employer is a contributor. After healthcare, the second-greatest concern among workers is jobs going overseas, and 60 percent say they worry about this often. Three in five (63 percent) workers believe that in today's economy it is hard to find a good job with financial security even with a college degree. And those Americans without a college education are feeling particularly gloomy this Labor Day. Sixty-three percent of non-college graduates believe their income is falling behind the cost of living, compared to 39 percent of college graduates. More details on the poll are posted on the AFL-CIO Web site http://www.aflcio.org/aboutus/laborday/ns08302005.cfm.