Racial and ethnic composition among adults who say that government aid to the poor does more harm than good by religious denomination (2014) Switch to: Religious denomination among adults who say that government aid to the poor does more harm than good by race/ethnicity

% of adults who say that government aid to the poor does more harm than good who identify as…

Religious denominationWhiteBlackAsianLatinoOther/MixedSample size
American Baptist Churches USA76%7%3%12%3%206
Assemblies of God76%2%< 1%17%5%258
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints88%1%2%6%3%401
Churches of Christ79%10%< 1%7%3%245
Episcopal Church92%3%< 1%1%4%184
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA)98%< 1%< 1%1%1%290
Independent Baptist (Evangelical Trad.)90%< 1%1%5%5%496
Interdenominational (Evangelical Trad.)80%10%3%3%5%101
Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod95%1%< 1%2%1%288
National Baptist Convention< 1%98%< 1%2%< 1%111
Nondenominational charismatic78%8%< 1%8%6%109
Nondenominational evangelical80%5%2%10%3%437
Nothing in particular (religion important)60%14%4%17%6%831
Nothing in particular (religion not important)72%5%5%14%3%1,067
Presbyterian Church (USA)92%< 1%1%6%1%165
Southern Baptist Convention89%4%< 1%3%3%1,181
United Methodist Church96%< 1%1%2%2%866
Sample sizes and margins of error vary from subgroup to subgroup, from year to year and from state to state. You can see the sample size for the estimates in this chart on rollover or in the last column of the table. And visit this table to see approximate margins of error for a group of a given size. Readers should always bear in mind the approximate margin of error for the group they are examining when making comparisons with other groups or assessing the significance of trends over time. For full question wording, see the survey questionnaire.

Learn More: White, Black, Asian, Latino, Other/Mixed