Some Americans’ views of China turned more negative after 2020, but others became more positive
While 26% of U.S. adults became more negative toward China between 2020 and 2022, 17% became more positive toward it.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
While 26% of U.S. adults became more negative toward China between 2020 and 2022, 17% became more positive toward it.
Both the number and share of new college graduates with a bachelor’s degree in education have decreased over the last few decades.
Online dating users who are Democrats are far more likely their Republican counterparts to say someone’s vaccination status is important for them to see.
Women have overtaken men and now account for more than half (50.7%) of the college-educated labor force in the United States.
Australian adults most frequently mentioned the political system when thinking about China, while others mentioned threats and human rights.
Favorable opinions of Russia and Putin have declined sharply among Europe’s populists following Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine.
Men who describe themselves as gay or bisexual are more likely to say they have received or intend to get a monkeypox vaccine.
Americans express less concern than in the spring about Ukraine being defeated by Russia and about the war expanding into other countries.
National polls like the Center’s come within a few percentage points, on average, of benchmarks from high response rate federal surveys.
Americans see capitalism as giving people more opportunity and more freedom than socialism, while they see socialism as more likely to meet people’s basic needs, though these perceptions differ significantly by party. Many Democrats say socialism meets people’s basic needs; Republicans say it restricts individual freedoms.
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