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Global Poll: Widespread Dissatisfaction With Free-Market Capitalism

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  • Global Poll: Widespread Dissatisfaction With Free-Market Capitalism

    GLOBAL POLL: WIDESPREAD DISSATISFACTION WITH FREE-MARKET CAPITALISM
    by James Robbins

    BBC World Service
    November 9, 2009

    Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a new BBC poll has
    found widespread dissatisfaction with free-market capitalism.

    In the global poll for the BBC World Service, only 11% of those
    questioned across 27 countries said that it was working well.

    Most thought regulation and reform of the capitalist system were
    necessary.

    There were also sharp divisions around the world on whether the end
    of the Soviet Union was a good thing.

    Economic regulation

    In 1989, as the Berlin Wall fell, it was a victory for ordinary people
    across Eastern and Central Europe.

    It also looked at the time like a crushing victory for free-market
    capitalism.

    Twenty years on, this new global poll suggests confidence in free
    markets has taken heavy blows from the past 12 months of financial
    and economic crisis.

    More than 29,000 people in 27 countries were questioned. In only two
    countries, the United States and Pakistan, did more than one in five
    people feel that capitalism works well as it stands.

    Almost a quarter - 23% of those who responded - feel it is fatally
    flawed. That is the view of 43% in France, 38% in Mexico and 35%
    in Brazil.

    And there is very strong support around the world for governments to
    distribute wealth more evenly. That is backed by majorities in 22 of
    the 27 countries.

    If there is one issue where a global consensus seems to emerge from
    the survey it is this: there are majorities almost everywhere wanting
    government to be more active in regulating business.

    It is only in Turkey that a majority want less government regulation.

    Opinion about the disintegration of the Soviet Union is sharply
    divided.

    Europeans overwhelmingly say it was a good thing: 79% in Germany,
    76% in Britain and 74% in France feel that way.

    But outside the developed West it is a different picture. Almost seven
    in 10 Egyptians say the end of the Soviet Union was a bad thing and
    views are sharply divided in India, Kenya and Indonesia.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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