More released from Pew Global Attitudes survey. From the IHT/NYTimes: “Eighty-six percent of the Chinese surveyed said they were content with the country’s direction, up from 48 percent in 2002 and a full 25 percentage points higher than th... ...full story at Blogging For China
from Blogging For China on Tue, Jul 22 2008
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| 15 Jan 08 |
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2007 Committee of 100 Parallel Survey (2/8) »
YouTube video The Committee of 100 released it's 2007 Parallel Survey "Hope and Fear: American and Chinese Attitudes Toward Each Other" on December 10, 2007 at the National Press Club in Washington DC. For more information, please visit... |
| 15 Aug 08 |
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China: The Pessoptimist Nation » China Beat By William A. CallahanChina is the most optimistic nation in the world. 86 percent think that their country is headed in the right direction, up from 48 percent in 2002 according to the latest Pew Global Attitudes survey.There are good reasons to be... |
| 23 Jul 08 |
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China's going strong! Me, not so much. » Shanghaiist Nationalistic optimism hits its worldwide high in China, a new survey by PEW Global Attitudes Project has found. Eighty-six percent reported being happy with their county’s direction, with 82 percent positive about the national economy. These numbers ha... |
| 10 Mar 08 |
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Olympics 'excite' the nation » Shanghai Daily ENTHUSIASM for August's Beijing Olympics is a nationwide phenomenon with 74 percent of Chinese either "excited" or "very excited," according to a survey released yesterday. In the Chinese capital, 79 percent of those surveyed were excited about the... |
| 23 Mar 08 |
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Survey: Chinese rural residents show concern on food safety » People's Daily Up to 86.1 percent of rural residents in China considered food safety a major concern when shopping, according to a survey conducted by the Ministry of Commerce. The figure is 28 percentage points higher than a year ago, and merely ... |
| 24 Apr 08 |
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Chinese shares open sharply higher on trading tax cut » People's Daily Chinese shares opened nearly 8 percent higher on Thursday morning, boosted by an overnight stock trading tax cut. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index opened 261.54 points, or7.98 percent higher at 3539.87 points on Thursday. ... |