Poll: One-Third Of Americans Fear They May Lose Jobs

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TOM RAUM | October 20, 2008 01:36 PM EST | AP

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WASHINGTON — With little relief in sight, people are getting more anxious about the slumping economy and how it affects them.

The share of people who believe the country is moving in the right direction has plunged in just a few weeks, from 28 percent in September to 15 percent in October, according to an Associated Press-Yahoo News poll of likely voters that was released Monday.

At the same time there is a drop in those surveyed who say they are happy about the way things are going in their own lives. Now 59 percent say they are personally happy, compared with 70 percent last month.

The magnitude of the financial meltdown and its impact on the overall economy is hitting people hard across the social and economic spectrum.

Strikingly, one-third are worried about losing their jobs, half fret they will be unable to keep up with mortgage and credit card payments, and seven in 10 are anxious that their stocks and retirement investments are losing value, according to the poll.

Also, there is widespread distress about being able to afford unexpected medical expenses and children's college expenses, and having to postpone retirement because their savings have eroded, the survey found.

"I'm just a normal person trying to get by in life," said Mary Huss, 57, an unemployed social worker from Salinas, Calif., who is facing cash shortages and questions about how she will pay her medical costs and her teenagers' college expenses. "And yet I feel fortunate that I'm not in the place where a lot of Americans are where they're losing their homes."

The AP-Yahoo News poll, conducted by Knowledge Networks, has repeatedly interviewed a group of about 2,000 people since last November in an effort to get a person-by-person view of how the country is reacting to the presidential campaign and the events affecting it.

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The picture the survey paints of those who have grown less happy since September is telling. One-third are retirees.

James Haste, 78, of Arvada, Colo., is among those who have watched their retirement savings shrink.

In September he said the nation was headed in the right direction. Now he is among the 84 percent who say it is hurtling off track. The retired engineer lists the financial crisis, the energy situation and rising unemployment as the top problems.

"Markets are going to come back, but not soon," he said. Banks and other financial institutions "are going to have to write off a lot of bad stuff, and who's going to take the hit? The banks can't do it if they're going to stay in business. It's a slow process."

A Republican, Haste said he sees government bailouts such as the $700 billion plan passed by Congress this month and the Treasury Department's plans to buy shares in major banks as necessary evils. Overall, 54 percent said they approved of the rescue plan, 28 percent disapproved and the rest had no opinion.

The poll shows how financial worries have permeated all corners of society, with some hit harder than others:

_While about one-third overall worry about financing a child's college education, six in 10 people under age 45 are anxious about it.

_53 percent worry they will have to work longer because their retirement savings have dwindled, and 66 percent of people in their 40s feel that way.

_One-third worry about losing their job, but nearly half in their 30s and 40s do.

_Forty-six percent of whites and 62 percent of blacks worry about making mortgage and credit card payments.

_Sixty-six percent overall are concerned about facing major medical bills, including 78 percent of unmarried women.

_Nearly eight in 10 college graduates worry that the value of their stocks and retirement investments is falling.

Public approval of both President Bush and Congress has followed the downward spiral of financial markets, the survey showed.

The poll found that 25 percent said they approved of the way Bush was handling his presidency, down from 32 percent in August. Remarkably, just 3 percent said they strongly approve of the job Bush is doing, compared with 51 percent strongly disapproving.

Just 11 percent said they approved of the job Congress is doing, while virtually no one gave lawmakers strong approval.

Anderson Lee, 21, a caregiver from Bowling Green, Ohio, is among those saying the country is heading the right way.

"Certainly there are some problems we're facing now with the economy and overseas issues," Lee said. "But we've faced larger problems in the past. That spirit of working together and working to make the country better will drive us through the problems we're facing."

Donna Gasior, 43, a professor at a Detroit-area community college, said the stock market tumble is having a "huge effect because pretty much everyone's retirement funds are in the stock market." She said she believes she has time to recoup but her 69-year-old mother "gets a majority of her income just from investments."

A Democrat, Gasior said that "mismanagement and policies have really come home to roost with the economic collapse we're seeing. I think things have been on the wrong track for a long time."

The AP-Yahoo News poll included 841 likely voters, was conducted from Oct. 3-13, and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.4 percentage points. Included were interviews with 373 Democrats, 252 Republicans and 214 independents.

The poll was conducted over the Internet by Knowledge Networks, which initially contacted people using traditional telephone polling methods and followed with online interviews. People chosen for the study who had no Internet access were given it for free.

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AP Director of Surveys Trevor Tompson, News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and writers Christine Simmons and Alan Fram contributed to this report.

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On the Net:

Polling site: http://news.yahoo.com/polls

WASHINGTON — With little relief in sight, people are getting more anxious about the slumping economy and how it affects them. The share of people who believe the country is moving in the right ...
WASHINGTON — With little relief in sight, people are getting more anxious about the slumping economy and how it affects them. The share of people who believe the country is moving in the right ...
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- Paul I'm a Fan of Paul 32 fans permalink

Anyone who is employed in the debt distribution business - bankers, construction, real-estate, car dealers, etc need to watch out. What happens when there is no "0% Down" or "EZ Credit" anymore?

What does the economy look like when people live within their means?

Toyota was advertising that they self-finance their cars.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 10/20/2008

All valid points you make. For decades, this economy has been expanding based upon people living beyond their means. And in some quarters it was even successfully proferred that you are entitled to own your own home whether you can afford it or not. And if the banks wouldn't lend you the money to buy one, they were "discriminating" against you.
We may have only scratched the surface of the financial mess that has resulted from this mentality. What about all the home equity loans? For years, the financial industry has been training people to believe that if they let equity build up in their home, it is 'going to waste'. Take out a HELOC. You deserve that trip to the islands. And it may be tax-deductlible. And what about all the credit card debt?
I've heard nothng but silence from the powers that be regarding those two issues. We should be badgering our representatives to demand a complete analysis of the entire financial industry ASAP. The Federal Reserve and the FDIC should be hiring auditors around the clock and sending armies of them into every nook and cranny. Every bank, every credit card issuer, every issuer of credit should be analyzed top to bottom. They have the authority to do it. We should demand that they use it NOW and not wait until after we are in the middle of the next crisis.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 AM on 10/21/2008
- Zeje I'm a Fan of Zeje 9 fans permalink

The banks got the bailout, silly, so they could CONTINUE to make loans -- earning interest, making money, from both small business and consumers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 AM on 10/21/2008
- MajorKong I'm a Fan of MajorKong 386 fans permalink
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I seem to recall a certain administration bragging, as recently as two years ago, that "Home ownership was at an all time high".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 10/21/2008
- blaising I'm a Fan of blaising 19 fans permalink
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Hey...don't worry about me...I already lost my job about a year and a half ago. Had a great job in the housing industry makin' great money, but watched the GOP cronies and their deregulation crap drive a stake into the heart of the industry. Housing crashed here in Florida and so did my job. There's nothing but scraps for jobs left down here now.

My firsthand witness of the decline down here tells me this: it wasn't the affordable housing folk that killed it...it was the greedy DINKs and Yuppies that were drunk on all that easy equity profit that did it in. I had many friends who were buyin' 2nd and 3rd homes to flip, livin' WAY beyond their means.

It all happened so fast...heard it from the sales folk I worked with first. Boy, were they ever in denial for the longest time. To a man, they refused to recognize the fact that property values could, would, drop.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 10/20/2008
- jalyn I'm a Fan of jalyn 6 fans permalink

Wow, you are correct about the greedy yuppies, who want to flip houses. Watching the Home and Garden channel, am seeing couples who house hunt where they must have huge separate closet space, large-fenced back yards for their many dogs, etc. Reality hasn't set in yet, and about career choices am noticing young people don't choose nursing, or health-care oriented jobs, elderly care workers; our generation which will eventually enter nursing care stage will be facing a shortage. It is scary.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 10/21/2008
- Chavez08 I'm a Fan of Chavez08 58 fans permalink
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I can't believe the millions of Americans that were watching all the jobs systematically going overseas that said "That can't happen in MY field!"

We're all slaves now, b*tches!

But McCain has a plan. You see, he'll strengthen the economy and create more jobs by outsourcing more American jobs so you, the ex-worker, can focus on day-trading.

I know, I know! - You were suckered by the Republican Revolution that promised apple-pie and 19th century butter-churns, - but didn't Reagan look soooo macho on his horse while he was enslaving you and your descendents?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 10/20/2008

Hear! Hear!

Damn NAFTA and CAFTA and GATT and the idiots who passed them.

Oh, and screw Wal Mart and the Walton family, too...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:17 PM on 10/20/2008

Time to go out and chant

"Four more years! Four more years!"

Remember how happy that made you four years ago? I think you should repeat that, again. How bad can it get from here?

:-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 PM on 10/20/2008

Don't blame me. Unlike half of America, I knew a good candidate when I saw one. When he took to the stage and saluted saying, "John Kerry reporting for duty." , I thought "My hero". Yesiree. If only all those "knuckledraggers" could have seen the light too and made it happen. The shysters on Wall Street would have snapped to and stopped behaving like riverboat gamblers. The last crooked mortgage would have been issued just prior to the great man swearing the oath of office. None of this would have dared to happen under the tenure of the formidable John Kerry. And useless, multimillionaire vineyard-owning Pelosi would have been magically transformed into a leader of the House of Representatives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 AM on 10/21/2008
- MajorKong I'm a Fan of MajorKong 386 fans permalink
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No, but we're in a hole and Kerry might at least have stopped digging.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 AM on 10/21/2008
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