Covid-19 is still the world’s biggest worry. But unemployment and poverty aren’t far behind
World

Covid-19 is still the world’s biggest worry. But unemployment and poverty aren’t far behind

According to a survey, longer-term trends show that unemployment, poverty and social inequality have been on the world's worry list consistently.

   

A mother with her child | Representational image | Suraj Singh Bisht | ThePrint

The latest Ipsos What worries the world survey shows that coronavirus remained the biggest worry globally in August.

More than a third (37%) of those surveyed placed the pandemic in the top three issues facing their country today.

The Ipsos survey tracks public opinion on social and political issues across 28 countries and can draw on 10 years of data to understand how topics of concern have changed.

The world’s worries

The latest survey showed that people think coronavirus is the biggest issue facing their country, followed by unemployment and then poverty and social inequality.

Financial/political corruption and crime and violence complete the top 5.

Longer-term trends show that unemployment and poverty and social inequality have been on the world’s worry list consistently. But, unsurprisingly, coronavirus emerged last year and has taken the top spot ever since.

Overall concern about the disease has declined, though, since peaking at the start of the pandemic.

The report also shows how people in different countries responded. For example, Malaysia is the country most concerned about COVID-19, while concern about crime and violence is highest in Sweden.

Concerned about the climate?

Just 15% of people surveyed globally said climate change was the biggest issue facing their country today. That puts it eighth on the overall list of worries, level with taxes and just ahead of inflation.

People in Germany are most worried about climate change, following by Australia and Canada. Germany saw a six percentage point increase on the month before and recorded its highest figure to date.

As the following chart shows, concern in the most-worried countries has risen over the past five years.

Joe Myers, Writer, Formative Content

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


Also read: Anxiety, depression, PTSD — how climate change is affecting mental health