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Peace, Security Still Out of Reach for Many Worldwide
Gallup's 2018 edition of its Global Law and Order report shows Venezuela and Afghanistan leading the countries where citizens feel least safe. Singapore rates as the world's safest.
Job Market Gloom Returns to Pre-Economic Crisis Levels
Worldwide, people's outlooks about their local job markets are returning to the pessimistic levels they were at before the global economic crisis. But Gallup surveys suggest the one in three who said it was a good time to find a job locally in ...
World Pessimistic About Job Prospects
Few citizens worldwide are positive about their ability to find employment, with Europeans struggling the most. However, developing economies are a bright spot in otherwise uncertain local job markets.
In Mideast, North Africa, Views of Powerful Nations Differ
Across 12 nations in the Middle East and North Africa, many people are more likely to approve of the leadership of Japan, China, France, and Germany than that of the United States, United Kingdom, and Russia.
In U.S., Religious Prejudice Stronger Against Muslims
Americans express more prejudice toward Muslims than toward followers of other major religious groups, according to a new report by the Gallup Center for Muslim Studies. The findings also reveal that Americans hold more negative views about ...
Worldwide, Peace and High Well-Being Generally Coexist
The countries with the highest well-being tend to be the most peaceful and those with the lowest well-being are the least likely to be peaceful. The findings are from a new Gallup analysis revealing a strong relationship between Gallup's life ...
Credit Cards and Formal Loans Rare in Developing Countries
Adults in high-income economies are more likely than those in developing ones to have a credit card -- 50% vs. 7% -- or to have taken out a formal loan in the past year --14% vs. 8% -- a 2011 Gallup/World Bank study of 148 countries finds.
Who's Most Likely to Be Thriving and Suffering Worldwide
Gallup is out with its 2011 global rankings of "thriving" and "suffering" -- encompassing 146 countries. Those who are thriving tend to have higher incomes, more education, good health, and social support. Those who are suffering often have ...
More Than One in 10 "Suffering" Worldwide
An average of 13% of adults worldwide rated their lives poorly enough to be "suffering" in 2011. Suffering ranged from 45% in Bulgaria to 1% or less in the United Arab Emirates, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Canada, Thailand, and Brazil.
Globally, Minority Acceptance Falls, Then Rises, With GDP
Gallup's research reveals a U-shaped relationship between countries' GDPs and residents' likelihood to see their communities as good places for racial and ethnic minorities. Among poorer countries, residents are less likely to feel this way as ...