Dissatisfaction 20 Years After Berlin Wall
Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a new BBC World Service global poll finds that dissatisfaction with free market capitalism is widespread, with an average of only 11% across 27 countries saying that it works well and that greater regulation is not a good idea.
In only
two countries do more than one in five feel that capitalism
works well as it stands--the US (25%) and Pakistan
(21%).
(To view full report please see the following document: http://img.scoop.co.nz/media/pdfs/0911/BBC_BerlinWall_Nov09_rpt.pdf)
The most common view is that free market capitalism
has problems that can be addressed through regulation and
reform--a view held by an average of 51% of more than 29,000
people polled by GlobeScan/PIPA.
An average of 23%
feel that capitalism is fatally flawed, and a new economic
system is needed--including 43% in France, 38% in Mexico,
35% in Brazil and 31% in Ukraine.
Furthermore,
majorities would like their government to be more active in
owning or directly controlling their country's major
industries in 15 of the 27 countries. This view is
particularly widely held in countries of the former Soviet
states of Russia (77%), and Ukraine (75%), but also Brazil
(64%), Indonesia (65%), and France (57%).
Majorities
support governments distributing wealth more evenly in 22 of
the 27 countries --on average two out of three (67%) across
all countries. In 17 of the 27 countries most want to see
government doing more to regulate business--on average
56%.
The poll also asked about whether the breakup of
the Soviet Union was a good thing or not. While an average
of 54% say it was a good thing, this is the majority view in
only 15 of the countries polled. An average of 22% say it
was mainly a bad thing, while 24% do not know.
Among
former Warsaw Pact countries, most Russians (61%) and
Ukrainians (54%) believe the breakup of the Soviet Union was
a bad thing. In contrast, four in five Poles (80%) and
nearly two-thirds of Czechs feel the disintegration of the
USSR was a good thing (63%).
The results are drawn
from a survey of 29,033 adult citizens across 27 countries,
conducted for BBC World Service by the international polling
firm GlobeScan, together with the Program on International
Policy Attitudes (PIPA) at the University of Maryland.
GlobeScan coordinated fieldwork between 19 June and 13
October 2009
GlobeScan Chairman Doug Miller says: "It
appears that the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 may not
have been the crushing victory for free-market capitalism
that it seemed at the time--particularly after the events of
the last 12 months."
"Some features of socialism, such
as government efforts to equalise wealth, continue to appeal
to many people around the world," comments Steven Kull of
PIPA.
ENDS