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HomeIndiaCovid-19 is not the world’s top worry anymore. Survey finds we are...

Covid-19 is not the world’s top worry anymore. Survey finds we are back to concerns of 2020

The Ipsos survey tracked public opinion on important social and political issues across 28 countries and drew on 10 years of data.

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The world is worrying more about poverty, social inequality and unemployment than about COVID-19, a new survey shows.

The latest Ipsos What Worries the World? survey for October 2021 finds it’s the first time in 18 months that coronavirus has been knocked off the top spot of world worries.

To compile the rankings, market research firm Ipsos tracks public opinion on the most important social and political issues today across 28 countries. It draws on 10 years of data to put the latest scores in context.

“Coronavirus has fallen to number three this month, with a seven-point dip in its global country average score,” Ipsos says.

World’s biggest worry

Poverty and social inequality are now the world’s top worries. On average, 33% of people surveyed across all countries say these are primary concerns – the highest recorded since February 2020.

Unemployment is the world’s second biggest worry, Ipsos says, ranked by 30% of people on average.

After coronavirus in third place, financial and political corruption, and crime and violence, are the world’s fourth and fifth top worries, Ipsos finds.

Country differences

People in Canada, Germany and Australia are the most worried about climate change.

The countries most worried about poverty and social inequality are Hungary and Russia, followed by Colombia and Brazil.

In South Africa, two-thirds of people (67%) say unemployment is a top worry, Ipsos says. More than half of survey respondents in Spain, Italy and Colombia agree.

Malaysia is the country most worried about COVID-19, with 64% of survey respondents choosing this as a top worry. Mexico, Germany, Peru and Brazil have all seen significant falls in the proportion of the public ranking the pandemic as a key concern.

The survey was conducted online with more than 20,000 adults aged 18-74 in Canada, Israel, Malaysia, South Africa, Turkey and the United States, and 16-74 in all 21 other countries.

This article was first published in World Economic Forum. Read the original article here 


Also read: COP26 draft text unbalanced, should acknowledge role of historical emissions, India says


 

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