Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Community Comparison

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Guamanian/Chamorro
Race
Ancestry
AfghanAfricanAlaska NativeAlaskan AthabascanAleutAlsatianAmericanApacheArabArapahoArgentineanArmenianAssyrian/Chaldean/SyriacAustralianAustrianBahamianBangladeshiBarbadianBasqueBelgianBelizeanBermudanBhutaneseBlackfeetBolivianBrazilianBritishBritish West IndianBulgarianBurmeseCajunCambodianCanadianCape VerdeanCarpatho RusynCelticCentral AmericanCentral American IndianCherokeeCheyenneChickasawChileanChineseChippewaChoctawColombianColvilleComancheCosta RicanCreeCreekCroatianCrowCubanCypriotCzechCzechoslovakianDanishDelawareDominicanDutchDutch West IndianEastern EuropeanEcuadorianEgyptianEnglishEstonianEthiopianEuropeanFijianFilipinoFinnishFrenchFrench American IndianFrench CanadianGermanGerman RussianGhanaianGreekGuamanian/ChamorroGuatemalanGuyaneseHaitianHmongHonduranHopiHoumaHungarianIcelanderIndian (Asian)IndonesianInupiatIranianIraqiIrishIroquoisIsraeliItalianJamaicanJapaneseJordanianKenyanKiowaKoreanLaotianLatvianLebaneseLiberianLithuanianLumbeeLuxembourgerMacedonianMalaysianMalteseMarshalleseMenomineeMexicanMexican American IndianMongolianMoroccanNative HawaiianNavajoNepaleseNew ZealanderNicaraguanNigerianNorthern EuropeanNorwegianOkinawanOsageOttawaPaiutePakistaniPalestinianPanamanianParaguayanPennsylvania GermanPeruvianPimaPolishPortuguesePotawatomiPuebloPuerto RicanPuget Sound SalishRomanianRussianSalvadoranSamoanScandinavianScotch-IrishScottishSeminoleSenegaleseSerbianShoshoneSierra LeoneanSiouxSlavicSlovakSloveneSomaliSouth AfricanSouth AmericanSouth American IndianSoviet UnionSpaniardSpanishSpanish AmericanSpanish American IndianSri LankanSubsaharan AfricanSudaneseSwedishSwissSyrianTaiwaneseThaiTlingit-HaidaTohono O'OdhamTonganTrinidadian and TobagonianTsimshianTurkishU.S. Virgin IslanderUgandanUkrainianUruguayanUteVenezuelanVietnameseWelshWest IndianYakamaYaquiYugoslavianYumanYup'ikZimbabwean
Immigration
NonimmigrantsImmigrantsAfghanistanAfricaAlbaniaArgentinaArmeniaAsiaAustraliaAustriaBahamasBangladeshBarbadosBelarusBelgiumBelizeBoliviaBosnia and HerzegovinaBrazilBulgariaBurma/MyanmarCabo VerdeCambodiaCameroonCanadaCaribbeanCentral AmericaChileChinaColombiaCongoCosta RicaCroatiaCubaCzechoslovakiaDenmarkDominicaDominican RepublicEastern AfricaEastern AsiaEastern EuropeEcuadorEgyptEl SalvadorEnglandEritreaEthiopiaEuropeFijiFranceGermanyGhanaGreeceGrenadaGuatemalaGuyanaHaitiHondurasHong KongHungaryIndiaIndonesiaIranIraqIrelandIsraelItalyJamaicaJapanJordanKazakhstanKenyaKoreaKuwaitLaosLatin AmericaLatviaLebanonLiberiaLithuaniaMalaysiaMexicoMicronesiaMiddle AfricaMoldovaMoroccoNepalNetherlandsNicaraguaNigeriaNorth AmericaNorth MacedoniaNorthern AfricaNorthern EuropeNorwayOceaniaPakistanPanamaPeruPhilippinesPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaSaudi ArabiaScotlandSenegalSerbiaSierra LeoneSingaporeSomaliaSouth AfricaSouth AmericaSouth Central AsiaSouth Eastern AsiaSouthern EuropeSpainSri LankaSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudanSwedenSwitzerlandSyriaTaiwanThailandTrinidad and TobagoTurkeyUgandaUkraineUruguayUzbekistanVenezuelaVietnamWest IndiesWestern AfricaWestern AsiaWestern EuropeYemenZaireZimbabweAzores
Albanian
Race
Ancestry
AfghanAfricanAlaska NativeAlaskan AthabascanAlbanianAleutAlsatianAmericanApacheArabArapahoArgentineanArmenianAssyrian/Chaldean/SyriacAustralianAustrianBahamianBangladeshiBarbadianBasqueBelgianBelizeanBermudanBhutaneseBlackfeetBolivianBrazilianBritishBritish West IndianBulgarianBurmeseCajunCambodianCanadianCape VerdeanCarpatho RusynCelticCentral AmericanCentral American IndianCherokeeCheyenneChickasawChileanChineseChippewaChoctawColombianColvilleComancheCosta RicanCreeCreekCroatianCrowCubanCypriotCzechCzechoslovakianDanishDelawareDominicanDutchDutch West IndianEastern EuropeanEcuadorianEgyptianEnglishEstonianEthiopianEuropeanFijianFilipinoFinnishFrenchFrench American IndianFrench CanadianGermanGerman RussianGhanaianGreekGuatemalanGuyaneseHaitianHmongHonduranHopiHoumaHungarianIcelanderIndian (Asian)IndonesianInupiatIranianIraqiIrishIroquoisIsraeliItalianJamaicanJapaneseJordanianKenyanKiowaKoreanLaotianLatvianLebaneseLiberianLithuanianLumbeeLuxembourgerMacedonianMalaysianMalteseMarshalleseMenomineeMexicanMexican American IndianMongolianMoroccanNative HawaiianNavajoNepaleseNew ZealanderNicaraguanNigerianNorthern EuropeanNorwegianOkinawanOsageOttawaPaiutePakistaniPalestinianPanamanianParaguayanPennsylvania GermanPeruvianPimaPolishPortuguesePotawatomiPuebloPuerto RicanPuget Sound SalishRomanianRussianSalvadoranSamoanScandinavianScotch-IrishScottishSeminoleSenegaleseSerbianShoshoneSierra LeoneanSiouxSlavicSlovakSloveneSomaliSouth AfricanSouth AmericanSouth American IndianSoviet UnionSpaniardSpanishSpanish AmericanSpanish American IndianSri LankanSubsaharan AfricanSudaneseSwedishSwissSyrianTaiwaneseThaiTlingit-HaidaTohono O'OdhamTonganTrinidadian and TobagonianTsimshianTurkishU.S. Virgin IslanderUgandanUkrainianUruguayanUteVenezuelanVietnameseWelshWest IndianYakamaYaquiYugoslavianYumanYup'ikZimbabwean
Immigration
NonimmigrantsImmigrantsAfghanistanAfricaAlbaniaArgentinaArmeniaAsiaAustraliaAustriaBahamasBangladeshBarbadosBelarusBelgiumBelizeBoliviaBosnia and HerzegovinaBrazilBulgariaBurma/MyanmarCabo VerdeCambodiaCameroonCanadaCaribbeanCentral AmericaChileChinaColombiaCongoCosta RicaCroatiaCubaCzechoslovakiaDenmarkDominicaDominican RepublicEastern AfricaEastern AsiaEastern EuropeEcuadorEgyptEl SalvadorEnglandEritreaEthiopiaEuropeFijiFranceGermanyGhanaGreeceGrenadaGuatemalaGuyanaHaitiHondurasHong KongHungaryIndiaIndonesiaIranIraqIrelandIsraelItalyJamaicaJapanJordanKazakhstanKenyaKoreaKuwaitLaosLatin AmericaLatviaLebanonLiberiaLithuaniaMalaysiaMexicoMicronesiaMiddle AfricaMoldovaMoroccoNepalNetherlandsNicaraguaNigeriaNorth AmericaNorth MacedoniaNorthern AfricaNorthern EuropeNorwayOceaniaPakistanPanamaPeruPhilippinesPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaSaudi ArabiaScotlandSenegalSerbiaSierra LeoneSingaporeSomaliaSouth AfricaSouth AmericaSouth Central AsiaSouth Eastern AsiaSouthern EuropeSpainSri LankaSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudanSwedenSwitzerlandSyriaTaiwanThailandTrinidad and TobagoTurkeyUgandaUkraineUruguayUzbekistanVenezuelaVietnamWest IndiesWestern AfricaWestern AsiaWestern EuropeYemenZaireZimbabweAzores
Social Comparison
Social Comparison
Income
Poverty
Unemployment
Labor Participation
Family Structure
Vehicle Availability
Education Level
Disability

Social Comparison

Guamanians/Chamorros

Albanians

Fair
Good
4,082
SOCIAL INDEX
38.3/ 100
SOCIAL RATING
205th/ 347
SOCIAL RANK
7,071
SOCIAL INDEX
68.2/ 100
SOCIAL RATING
131st/ 347
SOCIAL RANK

Albanian Integration in Guamanian/Chamorro Communities

The statistical analysis conducted on geographies consisting of 110,470,112 people shows a very strong positive correlation between the proportion of Albanians within Guamanian/Chamorro communities in the United States with a correlation coefficient (R) of 0.823. On average, for every 1% (one percent) increase in Guamanians/Chamorros within a typical geography, there is an increase of 0.299% in Albanians. To illustrate, in a geography comprising of 100,000 individuals, a rise of 1,000 Guamanians/Chamorros corresponds to an increase of 299.1 Albanians.
Guamanian/Chamorro Integration in Albanian Communities

Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Income

When considering income, the most significant differences between Guamanian/Chamorro and Albanian communities in the United States are seen in per capita income ($41,678 compared to $47,379, a difference of 13.7%), median female earnings ($38,717 compared to $42,584, a difference of 10.0%), and median male earnings ($53,661 compared to $58,680, a difference of 9.3%). Conversely, both communities are more comparable in terms of householder income under 25 years ($53,423 compared to $53,794, a difference of 0.69%), wage/income gap (26.0% compared to 25.4%, a difference of 2.2%), and median household income ($86,255 compared to $89,744, a difference of 4.1%).
Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Income
Income MetricGuamanian/ChamorroAlbanian
Per Capita Income
Tragic
$41,678
Exceptional
$47,379
Median Family Income
Fair
$101,061
Exceptional
$109,136
Median Household Income
Good
$86,255
Exceptional
$89,744
Median Earnings
Fair
$45,933
Exceptional
$50,116
Median Male Earnings
Fair
$53,661
Exceptional
$58,680
Median Female Earnings
Poor
$38,717
Exceptional
$42,584
Householder Age | Under 25 years
Exceptional
$53,423
Exceptional
$53,794
Householder Age | 25 - 44 years
Fair
$93,569
Exceptional
$101,367
Householder Age | 45 - 64 years
Good
$101,170
Exceptional
$106,243
Householder Age | Over 65 years
Exceptional
$63,187
Fair
$60,249
Wage/Income Gap
Fair
26.0%
Good
25.4%

Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Poverty

When considering poverty, the most significant differences between Guamanian/Chamorro and Albanian communities in the United States are seen in single father poverty (15.1% compared to 17.2%, a difference of 13.9%), single female poverty (21.6% compared to 19.4%, a difference of 11.4%), and seniors poverty over the age of 75 (11.6% compared to 12.7%, a difference of 9.6%). Conversely, both communities are more comparable in terms of single male poverty (12.2% compared to 12.4%, a difference of 1.9%), married-couple family poverty (4.9% compared to 5.0%, a difference of 2.0%), and receiving food stamps (11.7% compared to 12.0%, a difference of 2.7%).
Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Poverty
Poverty MetricGuamanian/ChamorroAlbanian
Poverty
Good
12.1%
Exceptional
11.7%
Families
Good
8.8%
Excellent
8.5%
Males
Good
11.0%
Exceptional
10.6%
Females
Good
13.3%
Exceptional
12.7%
Females 18 to 24 years
Exceptional
19.0%
Exceptional
18.4%
Females 25 to 34 years
Average
13.6%
Exceptional
12.5%
Children Under 5 years
Excellent
16.5%
Exceptional
16.0%
Children Under 16 years
Good
15.9%
Excellent
15.2%
Boys Under 16 years
Good
16.1%
Excellent
15.6%
Girls Under 16 years
Good
15.9%
Exceptional
15.4%
Single Males
Exceptional
12.2%
Exceptional
12.4%
Single Females
Poor
21.6%
Exceptional
19.4%
Single Fathers
Exceptional
15.1%
Tragic
17.2%
Single Mothers
Fair
29.4%
Exceptional
27.9%
Married Couples
Excellent
4.9%
Good
5.0%
Seniors Over 65 years
Excellent
10.5%
Fair
11.2%
Seniors Over 75 years
Exceptional
11.6%
Tragic
12.7%
Receiving Food Stamps
Average
11.7%
Fair
12.0%

Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Unemployment

When considering unemployment, the most significant differences between Guamanian/Chamorro and Albanian communities in the United States are seen in unemployment among women with children under 18 years (5.8% compared to 5.1%, a difference of 12.6%), unemployment among ages 35 to 44 years (5.1% compared to 4.6%, a difference of 9.3%), and unemployment among women with children under 6 years (7.8% compared to 7.2%, a difference of 8.8%). Conversely, both communities are more comparable in terms of male unemployment (5.4% compared to 5.4%, a difference of 0.57%), unemployment among seniors over 65 years (5.2% compared to 5.2%, a difference of 0.84%), and unemployment among ages 65 to 74 years (5.4% compared to 5.4%, a difference of 1.0%).
Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Unemployment
Unemployment MetricGuamanian/ChamorroAlbanian
Unemployment
Tragic
5.5%
Average
5.3%
Males
Poor
5.4%
Poor
5.4%
Females
Tragic
5.6%
Good
5.2%
Youth < 25
Tragic
11.9%
Tragic
12.1%
Age | 16 to 19 years
Poor
17.9%
Tragic
18.2%
Age | 20 to 24 years
Fair
10.4%
Tragic
10.8%
Age | 25 to 29 years
Fair
6.8%
Average
6.6%
Age | 30 to 34 years
Tragic
5.8%
Good
5.4%
Age | 35 to 44 years
Tragic
5.1%
Good
4.6%
Age | 45 to 54 years
Tragic
4.7%
Fair
4.6%
Age | 55 to 59 years
Fair
4.9%
Tragic
5.0%
Age | 60 to 64 years
Fair
4.9%
Exceptional
4.7%
Age | 65 to 74 years
Average
5.4%
Poor
5.4%
Seniors > 65
Fair
5.2%
Tragic
5.2%
Seniors > 75
Tragic
9.0%
Good
8.6%
Women w/ Children < 6
Fair
7.8%
Exceptional
7.2%
Women w/ Children 6 to 17
Fair
9.1%
Exceptional
8.6%
Women w/ Children < 18
Tragic
5.8%
Exceptional
5.1%

Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Labor Participation

When considering labor participation, the most significant differences between Guamanian/Chamorro and Albanian communities in the United States are seen in in labor force | age 16-19 (38.2% compared to 36.5%, a difference of 4.6%), in labor force | age 20-24 (76.7% compared to 74.6%, a difference of 2.9%), and in labor force | age 30-34 (83.5% compared to 85.7%, a difference of 2.7%). Conversely, both communities are more comparable in terms of in labor force | age > 16 (65.6% compared to 65.3%, a difference of 0.45%), in labor force | age 20-64 (79.1% compared to 80.2%, a difference of 1.5%), and in labor force | age 25-29 (83.9% compared to 85.5%, a difference of 1.9%).
Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Labor Participation
Labor Participation MetricGuamanian/ChamorroAlbanian
In Labor Force | Age > 16
Exceptional
65.6%
Good
65.3%
In Labor Force | Age 20-64
Tragic
79.1%
Exceptional
80.2%
In Labor Force | Age 16-19
Exceptional
38.2%
Average
36.5%
In Labor Force | Age 20-24
Exceptional
76.7%
Poor
74.6%
In Labor Force | Age 25-29
Tragic
83.9%
Exceptional
85.5%
In Labor Force | Age 30-34
Tragic
83.5%
Exceptional
85.7%
In Labor Force | Age 35-44
Tragic
83.4%
Exceptional
85.1%
In Labor Force | Age 45-54
Tragic
81.6%
Exceptional
83.3%

Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Family Structure

When considering family structure, the most significant differences between Guamanian/Chamorro and Albanian communities in the United States are seen in single father households (2.6% compared to 2.0%, a difference of 30.1%), single mother households (6.6% compared to 5.9%, a difference of 12.5%), and family households with children (29.7% compared to 26.5%, a difference of 12.2%). Conversely, both communities are more comparable in terms of currently married (47.1% compared to 47.0%, a difference of 0.25%), average family size (3.29 compared to 3.17, a difference of 3.9%), and married-couple households (48.1% compared to 46.1%, a difference of 4.3%).
Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Family Structure
Family Structure MetricGuamanian/ChamorroAlbanian
Family Households
Exceptional
66.6%
Tragic
63.5%
Family Households with Children
Exceptional
29.7%
Tragic
26.5%
Married-couple Households
Exceptional
48.1%
Fair
46.1%
Average Family Size
Exceptional
3.29
Tragic
3.17
Single Father Households
Tragic
2.6%
Exceptional
2.0%
Single Mother Households
Poor
6.6%
Exceptional
5.9%
Currently Married
Good
47.1%
Good
47.0%
Divorced or Separated
Poor
12.3%
Exceptional
11.5%
Births to Unmarried Women
Average
31.6%
Exceptional
28.5%

Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Vehicle Availability

When considering vehicle availability, the most significant differences between Guamanian/Chamorro and Albanian communities in the United States are seen in no vehicles in household (8.0% compared to 15.6%, a difference of 96.0%), 4 or more vehicles in household (8.1% compared to 4.8%, a difference of 68.4%), and 3 or more vehicles in household (23.2% compared to 15.8%, a difference of 47.0%). Conversely, both communities are more comparable in terms of 1 or more vehicles in household (92.1% compared to 84.4%, a difference of 9.1%), 2 or more vehicles in household (60.5% compared to 49.0%, a difference of 23.4%), and 3 or more vehicles in household (23.2% compared to 15.8%, a difference of 47.0%).
Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Vehicle Availability
Vehicle Availability MetricGuamanian/ChamorroAlbanian
No Vehicles Available
Exceptional
8.0%
Tragic
15.6%
1+ Vehicles Available
Exceptional
92.1%
Tragic
84.4%
2+ Vehicles Available
Exceptional
60.5%
Tragic
49.0%
3+ Vehicles Available
Exceptional
23.2%
Tragic
15.8%
4+ Vehicles Available
Exceptional
8.1%
Tragic
4.8%

Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Education Level

When considering education level, the most significant differences between Guamanian/Chamorro and Albanian communities in the United States are seen in master's degree (13.1% compared to 17.0%, a difference of 29.7%), professional degree (3.8% compared to 4.9%, a difference of 28.6%), and doctorate degree (1.6% compared to 1.9%, a difference of 18.6%). Conversely, both communities are more comparable in terms of nursery school (97.9% compared to 98.0%, a difference of 0.080%), kindergarten (97.9% compared to 97.9%, a difference of 0.080%), and 1st grade (97.8% compared to 97.9%, a difference of 0.080%).
Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Education Level
Education Level MetricGuamanian/ChamorroAlbanian
No Schooling Completed
Fair
2.2%
Good
2.1%
Nursery School
Fair
97.9%
Average
98.0%
Kindergarten
Fair
97.9%
Average
97.9%
1st Grade
Fair
97.8%
Average
97.9%
2nd Grade
Fair
97.8%
Average
97.9%
3rd Grade
Fair
97.7%
Average
97.8%
4th Grade
Fair
97.4%
Good
97.6%
5th Grade
Fair
97.2%
Good
97.4%
6th Grade
Fair
97.0%
Average
97.1%
7th Grade
Fair
95.9%
Excellent
96.3%
8th Grade
Fair
95.6%
Excellent
96.0%
9th Grade
Fair
94.8%
Good
95.1%
10th Grade
Fair
93.6%
Excellent
94.1%
11th Grade
Average
92.5%
Excellent
93.0%
12th Grade, No Diploma
Fair
91.0%
Excellent
91.8%
High School Diploma
Fair
88.9%
Excellent
89.8%
GED/Equivalency
Fair
85.3%
Excellent
86.6%
College, Under 1 year
Average
65.4%
Good
65.9%
College, 1 year or more
Fair
58.6%
Good
60.4%
Associate's Degree
Tragic
43.8%
Exceptional
48.8%
Bachelor's Degree
Tragic
34.6%
Exceptional
40.9%
Master's Degree
Tragic
13.1%
Exceptional
17.0%
Professional Degree
Tragic
3.8%
Exceptional
4.9%
Doctorate Degree
Tragic
1.6%
Good
1.9%

Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Disability

When considering disability, the most significant differences between Guamanian/Chamorro and Albanian communities in the United States are seen in disability age 35 to 64 (12.2% compared to 10.6%, a difference of 15.0%), disability age 65 to 74 (25.3% compared to 22.3%, a difference of 13.5%), and disability age 18 to 34 (7.2% compared to 6.4%, a difference of 11.9%). Conversely, both communities are more comparable in terms of self-care disability (2.6% compared to 2.6%, a difference of 0.18%), ambulatory disability (6.3% compared to 6.2%, a difference of 0.95%), and female disability (12.5% compared to 12.3%, a difference of 1.7%).
Guamanian/Chamorro vs Albanian Disability
Disability MetricGuamanian/ChamorroAlbanian
Disability
Tragic
12.3%
Average
11.7%
Males
Tragic
12.0%
Good
11.1%
Females
Tragic
12.5%
Fair
12.3%
Age | Under 5 years
Average
1.2%
Exceptional
1.1%
Age | 5 to 17 years
Tragic
5.8%
Excellent
5.5%
Age | 18 to 34 years
Tragic
7.2%
Excellent
6.4%
Age | 35 to 64 years
Tragic
12.2%
Exceptional
10.6%
Age | 65 to 74 years
Tragic
25.3%
Exceptional
22.3%
Age | Over 75 years
Tragic
49.4%
Exceptional
46.3%
Vision
Tragic
2.3%
Exceptional
2.1%
Hearing
Tragic
3.3%
Good
2.9%
Cognitive
Tragic
17.9%
Exceptional
16.8%
Ambulatory
Poor
6.3%
Poor
6.2%
Self-Care
Tragic
2.6%
Tragic
2.6%