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Poll on Muslims view on globalization and trade

The World Public Opinion.Org organization just released an August 28 titled, “Muslims Positive About Globalization, Trade”.  The World Public Opinion.Org network is a consortium of research centers in 22 countries.

A segment of the article revealing their findings are shown below:

Contrary to the common assumption that Muslims view globalization as a threat to their society, a new poll of Muslim countries finds that globalization is generally viewed positively.  The poll was conducted by WorldPublicOpinion.org in six nations with predominantly Muslim populations in different regions of the world including Egypt, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Iran, Indonesia, and the Palestinian Territories, plus the Muslim population of Nigeria.

Asked about “globalization, especially the increasing connections of our economy with others around the world,” majorities in six of the seven nations polled say that it is “mostly good” for their country.  Approval is highest among Egyptians and Nigerian Muslims (79% and 78% saying mostly good, respectively).   Sixty-three percent of Azerbaijanis, 61 percent of both Iranians and Indonesians, and 58 percent of Palestinians see globalization as mostly good.  While support in Turkey does not reach a
majority, a plurality still calls globalization mostly good (39% to 28%).

On average across all seven publics, 63 percent say that globalization is good for their own countries.  Only 25 percent think it is mostly bad.

The poll of 5,216 respondents was conducted January 12 - February 23, 2008 by WorldPublicOpinion.org, a collaborative research project involving research centers from around the world and managed by the Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) at the University of Maryland. Not all questions were asked in every country. Margins of error range from +/- 3.2 to 4.1
percent.

The poll finds that most respondents also view international trade as good for their countries and themselves.  At the same time, many are concerned about trade’s effects on workers and the environment.

However most express interest in addressing these effects, not through protectionism but through an international, cooperative effort integrating labor and environmental standards into agreements on international trade.

Steven Kull, director of WorldPublicOpinion.org comments, “These findings run counter to the widespread assumption that people in the Muslim world are anxious and hostile about the prospect of integration into the global economy.”

 

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