(Source: Business Wire)

While much of the focus of President Obama has been on health care
reform over the past few weeks, the issue of the economy is still on his
plate. Currently, three in five Americans (60%) would rate the job the
president is doing on the economy as negative while two in five (40%)
would rate his job as positive. This is virtually unchanged from last
month when 39% rated President Obama's economic job performance as
positive and 61% rated it as negative.
These are some of the results of The
Harris Poll® of 2,334 adults surveyed online
between September 8 and 15, 2009 by Harris
Interactive®.
Confidence in the White House
Confidence in the White House and the Administration to produce policies
to help fix the economic crisis has dropped in the past month. In
August, over half of Americans (53%) had confidence while 47% did not
have confidence. One month later, over half of Americans (52%) now are
not confident that the Obama Administration can produce policies to help
fix the economic crisis while 48% are confident they will.
Financial conditions ahead
Overall, two in five Americans (40%) expect the economy to improve in
the coming year while just over one-third (36%) say they expect it to
stay the same and one-quarter (24%) believe it will get worse. In
August, almost half (46%) of Americans believed the economy would
improve in the coming year.
When it comes to household's financial situation, about half of
Americans (48%) believe it will remain the same in the next six months
while one-quarter (23%) say it will get better and three in ten (29%)
believe it will get worse. This is almost unchanged from last month when
48% said it would remain the same, 24% said it would get better and 28%
of Americans believed their household's financial situation would get
worse.
The job market
When it comes to the job market, attitudes are mostly negative.
Two-thirds of Americans (68%) say the current job market in their region
of the country is bad while just one in ten (10%) say it is good and 22%
believe it is neither good nor bad. Last month, 71% of Americans said
the job market in their region was bad and 8% said it was good. Those in
the West and Midwest are most negative about the job markets in their
region (77% and 70% saying it is bad respectively) while 15% of
Southerners say it is good.
So what?
While health care may be the topic of the day, week, and month for the
White House, the president and his team need to be careful to not forget
about the economy, especially the job market. While people are hearing
about how things are getting better, that is not translating into jobs.
It's also not translating into confidence -- Americans are continuing to
give President Obama negative ratings on his handling of the economy and
are not confident his team will produce policies to fix things. This
negativity may bleed into other issues the White House is promoting,
hurting their chances for success.
The Harris Poll® #104
By Regina A. Corso, Director, The Harris Poll
Methodology
This Harris Poll was conducted online within the United States September
8 and 15, 2009 among 2,334 adults (aged 18 and over). Figures for age,
sex, race/ethnicity, education, region and household income were
weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual
proportions in the population. Propensity score weighting was also used
to adjust for respondents' propensity to be online. Full data
tables and methodology are available at www.harrisinteractive.com.
These statements conform to the principles of disclosure of the
National Council on Public Polls.
About Harris Interactive
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