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Popular Participation: Exercise 2 - Types and activities of interest groups


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Types of Interest Groups

     There are two general types of interest groups: economic and non-economic. Economic groups include business, labor, agricultural and professional groups. Their goals are to provide jobs, improve members' pay, and protect an occupation or industry. In addition, individual members and the industry often profit financially from the group's activities. In the 1990s, members of the government tried to create a system for universal health care. The universal healthcare system would have put limits on the amount of pay doctors could receive, and the amount of money hospitals could charge for procedures. The American Medical Association, a professional special interest group, and the insurance industry fought hard against the universal healthcare proposal and defeated it.

     Non-economic groups promote issues they believe in, but they do not provide members with individual financial benefits. Instead, members of non-economic groups work for what they believe is the benefit of society as a whole. Non-economic groups fall into three categories: public interest, single-issue and ideological groups. Public interest groups represent the concerns of society as a whole. Single-issue groups focus their efforts on influencing policy in just one area, while ideological groups operate from a philosophical or moral basis, and are interested in influencing policy in a more general way.

     Interest groups receive money from members' dues, donations, or in the case of a business or corporate interest group, as part of their budget to pay for their activities. As such, non-economic interest groups have a more difficult time raising money and therefore influencing public policy than the economic groups. Of all the economic groups, business ones are the best funded, the best organized and the most influential.

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