Public trust crumbles amid COVID, fake news – global survey | Inquirer News

Public trust crumbles amid COVID, fake news – global survey

/ 08:47 PM January 13, 2021

LONDON Trust in governments, business chiefs, and media is crumbling amid a perceived mishandling by leaders of the coronavirus pandemic and a widespread feeling among ordinary citizens that they are being misled, a global survey has found.

The Edelman Trust Barometer, which for two decades has polled thousands of people on their trust in core institutions, found 57% of people believe government leaders, business chiefs, and journalists are spreading falsehoods or exaggerations.

Breaking out responses according to a person’s media habits and voting patterns, the survey found a greater hesitancy on vaccines among those who rely mostly on social media, and underlined the polarization of politics in the United States.

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“The violent storming of the U.S. Capitol last week and the fact that only one-third of people are willing to get a COVID vaccine, crystalize the dangers of misinformation,” said Richard Edelman, whose Edelman communications group produces the survey.

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The figure cited by Edelman referred to the fact that an average of only 33% of respondents in 27 countries covered by the survey said they would take the vaccine as soon as possible. A further 31% said they would take it within a year.

The survey was conducted between Oct. 19 and Nov. 18 among more than 33,000 respondents, with a supplement carried out in December after the U.S. presidential election.

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Governments less trusted

Governments, which in a previous survey conducted early in the pandemic saw a bounce in their trust ratings from publics who wanted them to prioritize saving lives over the economy, saw sharp losses in trust levels as the year progressed.

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As a whole, confidence in the institution of government fell from an all-time high of 65% last May to 53% by year-end. Losses were particularly acute in South Korea, Britain, and China.

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Trust in media, which had already been ebbing in the survey since 2019, fell further. Confidence in traditional media outlets dropped 8 points to 53% although they still attracted more trust than social media, which fell five points to 35%.

Strong national majorities across the board considered media was doing a poor job at being objective and non-partisan, with Japan in Asia, Italy in Europe, and Argentina in South America all registering particularly high scores of mistrust.

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In the United States, levels of trust diverged according to political affiliation: while 63% of Joe Biden voters trusted journalists, that figure fell to 21% for voters of Donald Trump, who has long denigrated mainstream media as “fake news.”

Despite the fact that business leaders were suspected by a majority of engaging in falsehoods and exaggerations, they nonetheless came out of the survey with better overall trust levels than either governments or the media.

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Nine in 10 respondents said they wanted CEOs to speak out on the pandemic’s impact and labor and societal issues, and more than two-thirds expect them to step in when the government does not fix problems.

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TAGS: Business, CEOs, COVID-19, fake news, Government, journalists, leaders, Media, News, pandemic, Politics, Social Media, survey, Trust

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