Top of page.

High Peak Liberal Democrats

Navigation.
Content.

British public wrong about nearly everything, survey shows

July 10, 2013 2:02 PM
By Jonathan Paige in The Independent
Originally published by East Midlands Liberal Democrats

Research shows public opinion often deviates from facts on key social issues including crime, benefit fraud and immigration.

A new survey for the Royal Statistical Society and King's College London shows public opinion is repeatedly off the mark on issues including crime, benefit fraud and immigration.

The research, carried out by Ipsos Mori from a phone survey of 1,015 people aged 16 to 75, lists ten misconceptions held by the British public. Among the biggest misconceptions are:

Among the other surprising figures are that 26 per cent of people think foreign aid is in the top three items the Government spends money on (it actually makes up just 1.1 per cent of expenditure), and that 29 per cent of people think more is spent on Jobseekers' Allowance than pensions.

In fact we spend 15 times more on pensions - £4.9 billion on JSA vs £74.2 billion on pensions.

Hetan Shah, executive director of the Royal Statistical Society, said: "Our data poses real challenges for policymakers. How can you develop good policy when public perceptions can be so out of kilter with the evidence?

"We need to see three things happen. First, politicians need to be better at talking about the real state of affairs of the country, rather than spinning the numbers. Secondly, the media has to try and genuinely illuminate issues, rather than use statistics to sensationalise.

"And finally we need better teaching of statistical literacy in schools, so that people get more comfortable in understanding evidence."

Bobby Duffy, the managing director of Ipsos Mori Social Research Institute, said: "A lack of trust in government information is also very evident in other questions in the survey - so 'myth-busting' is likely to prove a challenge on many of these issues. But it is still useful to understand where people get their facts most wrong."

John Wheaver - Kettering and Wellingborough comments

The explanation is that people are believing lies. Lies that have been told in order to sell newspapers. Libel laws and lawyers protect this dishonesty. The law serves wickedness.

One other question should have been: "How many people believe that a candidate who most voters want to lose will invariably lose?" (And how many of them supported a system which means that they will not?).