To Chinese people, future looks bright By Donald Greenlees (International Herald Tribune) Updated: 2005-11-16 17:06
China's surging economy has had one unsurprising by-product: The Chinese
people are feeling good about themselves and the world, according to an opinion
survey.
An index of personal optimism, produced by the Pew Research
Center, an independent opinion research organization based in Washington, shows
China has emerged as "the world leader in hope for the future."
Many
Chinese people feel they have made substantial progress in the past five years,
think they will be much better off in another five years and are satisfied with
the state of the nation, according to the survey, released Tuesday.
In
the survey, conducted over the last 10 days of May in major Chinese
mainland cities, 76 percent of respondents were found to be optimistic
about improving their quality of life within five years. This ranked the Chinese
at the top of 17 countries in which the global attitudes survey was
conducted.
The Chinese were only matched by Indians for optimism. Of
respondents in India - Asia's other economic success story - 75 percent expected
their personal situation to improve. By contrast, in the United States only 48
percent of the survey group expected life to get better, a fall of 13 points
since the last survey, in the summer of 2002.
Analysts say the upbeat
mood of the Chinese people is undoubtedly linked to rising incomes, wider
consumer choices and improved living and working conditions in major cities as
the economy bounds along at an expected growth rate of 9.2 percent this
year.
"I am not surprised people feel better off because household
incomes have gone up quite a lot in the last five to 10 years," Clint Laurent,
executive director of Asian Demographics, a consulting firm, said in a phone
interview from Beijing.
"Certainly, an increasing proportion of people
have a nicer home, an increasing proportion of people can afford proper medical
care, and an increasing proportion has more satisfying jobs as skill levels go
up."
Many Chinese feel their personal situation has improved. When the
Pew Center asked respondents worldwide to rate whether they had made "personal
progress" over the past five years, again the Chinese came out on top. Fifty
percent of Chinese surveyed claimed to have made progress, the largest
proportion of any nationality.
The sense of progress in personal welfare
appears to have had a political dividend. 72 percent of those surveyed in China
said they were satisfied with national conditions. That was the highest
proportion in 17 countries surveyed and compared with expressions of
dissatisfaction from 73 percent of Germans and 57 percent of U.S.
respondents.
The Pew Center also found "the personally upbeat attitude
and self-confidence" reported by the Chinese people was reflected in views of
how their country is seen abroad. Almost 7 of 10 Chinese surveyed thought the
country was well-liked in the world. Only 42 percent had a favorable view of the
United States, compared with 71 percent of Indians.
Still, not everyone
feels like a winner in China.
The survey found that 31 percent of
Chinese respondents felt they had "lost ground" in the past five years.
This despite extraordinarily rapid economic growth built on low-cost
exports and foreign investment.
The Pew Center noted the result was "a
reminder that China's economic growth has not touched everyone."
Even
those Chinese who feel upwardly mobile still have a way to go before they
fulfill their aspirations. Respondents were asked to rank themselves on a scale
of 1 to 10, ranging from "the worst possible life" to "the best possible
life."
On this "ladder of life," the Pew Center found 57 percent of
Chinese were bunched in the middle, with ratings of 4 to 6. Only 29 percent said
they were on the top rungs, with ratings of 7 to 10. In the United States, 59
percent of the people already place themselves on the top rungs.
The Pew
Center survey was carried out in face-to-face interviews with 2,191 Chinese who
were mainly in the cities of Beijing, Chengdu, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Shenyang and
Wuhan, which it acknowledged gave the results an urban bias.
Brian
Negley, an executive director of AC Nielsen's China office, based in Shanghai,
said the urban weighting of the survey made it difficult to do direct
comparisons with other countries with smaller disparities between urban and
rural areas.
"The difference between urban and non-urban in China is much
bigger than in most of those comparison countries," he said. "So to come out and
say China is the most optimistic country in the world might be a bit of a
stretch if you just think of how the survey was done and
conducted."
Laurent, of Asian Demographics, added that opinion surveys in
China often needed to be "taken with a grain of salt" because of a tendency
among many respondents to want to give positive replies.
"Chinese are
very nationalistic and they will be prone to come out with such high
satisfaction scores because they are very proud of China," he said. "It would be
seen as being disloyal to say you weren't satisfied."
This story is
from International Herald Tribune website.
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