Fourth Allstate-National Journal Heartland Monitor Poll Finds Expectations of a Better 2010 Despite Pessimism About the Effect o
January 14 2010 - 9:30AM
PR Newswire (US)
Survey reveals middle class Americans feel ignored by elected
officials and corporations and are split over economic policies one
year into Obama presidency WASHINGTON, Jan. 14
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The Allstate Corporation (NYSE:ALL) and
National Journal today announced the results of the fourth
Heartland Monitor, the latest release in a groundbreaking series of
surveys that has delivered new insights on how Americans are
navigating the post-recession economy, their faith in key
institutions and their concerns about the future. This installment,
which serves as a definitive portrait of the country's mood one
year after President Obama's inauguration, finds growing
dissatisfaction among Americans regarding the state of the country
and the impact of economic policies on their lives. "Americans are
taking control of their financial lives in the face of continued
economic uncertainty and concern over the country's direction,"
said Thomas J. Wilson, Allstate chairman, president and chief
executive officer. "Almost half of consumers state they have made
major cuts in spending, and 32 percent have withdrawn savings or
pension funds to make ends meet. They also feel they are going it
alone without much help from government or business. As a result,
they are very interested in improving their financial expertise.
Allstate has a responsibility to meet this need, and we will work
to educate and empower middle class Americans to make good
financial choices." The latest survey finds 55 percent of Americans
believe the country is on the wrong track - the highest percentage
yet in the Heartland Monitor series. In addition, President Obama's
job approval rating has dipped to its lowest position in the
series, to 47 percent, but 52 percent believe the country is
beginning to move in the right direction because of his policies.
Opinion on the administration's economic policies is divided, with
Americans split over whether they have been ineffective while
raising deficits (46 percent) or have prevented an even worse
crisis and set the stage for recovery (43 percent). Collectively,
elected officials were regarded as being out of touch with the
concerns of everyday Americans: 80 percent said government
officials had done a fair or poor job of addressing financial
issues and 60 percent said banks, investment companies and major
corporations were the main beneficiaries of federal action, as
opposed to middle class and low-income individuals (17 percent).
Respondents were evenly divided over whether this was an issue of
design (48 percent) or poor execution (46 percent). Respondents
maintained a cautious outlook about their own lives, with the
country divided relatively closely between those who think their
conditions will improve (37 percent), those who think they will
worsen (20 percent), and a plurality who don't expect much change
(41 percent). Large majorities placed a lot of trust in their
family (64 percent) and themselves (74 percent) to help manage
financial risk. While trust in government, banks and corporations
remained low, the survey found strong support for actions that
major institutions could take to win back people's confidence.
Solid majorities said they would have a lot more trust in elected
officials if they focused more on making government programs more
effective while reducing wasteful spending (64 percent) and were
upfront about whom they meet with and who donates to their
campaigns (58 percent). Large financial corporations, meanwhile,
could win back trust by acknowledging mistakes, paying back bailout
money, hiring more American workers and providing access to
financial literacy programs. "Hope was the great anthem for
President Obama's 2008 campaign, but for many Americans these days,
hope seems in very short supply," said Atlantic Media Political
Director Ronald Brownstein. "The latest Allstate-National Journal
Heartland Monitor poll underscores the long, long reach of this
prolonged recession into all corners of American life - and the
cost that it is imposing on public confidence in many of our
economic leaders and institutions, from President Obama and
Congress, to major corporations and the financial sector. In all,
this incisive survey captures a season of discontent that has
settled over America like a biting winter chill." Notes to Editors
Survey Methodology The fourth installment of the Allstate-National
Journal Heartland Monitor poll was conducted by FD on January 3-7,
2010. Results are from a sample of 1,200 American adults. Questions
asked of the full sample had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.8
percent. The margin of error on other questions varied based on the
size of the subsample. About Allstate The Allstate Corporation
(NYSE:ALL) is the nation's largest publicly held personal lines
insurer. Widely known through the "You're In Good Hands With
Allstate®" slogan, Allstate is reinventing protection and
retirement to help more than 17 million households insure what they
have today and better prepare for tomorrow. Consumers access
Allstate insurance products and services through Allstate agencies,
independent agencies, and Allstate exclusive financial
representatives in the U.S. and Canada, as well as via
http://www.allstate.com/ and 1-800 Allstate®. About National
Journal Group Since 1969, National Journal Group has provided
insight for insiders through nonpartisan reporting on current
political and policy issues as well as tools professionals need to
do their jobs well. National Journal Group properties include
National Journal, CongressDaily, NationalJournal.com, The Hotline,
The Almanac of American Politics and Global Security Newswire. It
partners with WETA to produce "Washington Week With Gwen Ifill and
National Journal." About FD One of the most highly regarded
consultancies in the communications industry, FD employs more than
750 staff and advises more than 1,000 clients worldwide through its
hub offices in London and New York, as well as its network of
wholly owned offices in Bahrain, Beijing, Bogota, Boston, Brussels,
Cape Town, Chicago, Dubai, Dublin, Frankfurt, Hong Kong,
Johannesburg, Los Angeles, Manchester, Melbourne, Moscow, Panama
City, Paris, San Francisco, Shanghai, Sydney and Washington, DC.
With a 20-year history of advising clients in both the private and
public sectors, FD's services include financial public relations,
capital markets communications, public affairs, crisis and issues
management and corporate, business-to-business and
business-to-consumer communications. FD is also a market leader in
M&A advisory work. FD is structured around specialist sector
teams operating on an international basis, covering consumer
industries, financial services, basic industries, business
services, life sciences & healthcare, media, real estate,
technology and telecommunications. FD is a division of FTI
Consulting Inc. (NYSE:FCN), the global business advisory firm. For
more information, please visit http://www.fd.com/. DATASOURCE: The
Allstate Corporation CONTACT: Margot Olcay, +1-212-850 5611, , for
The Allstate Corporation; or David Miller, +1-202-266 7313, Web
Site: http://www.allstate.com/
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