Fewer US parents to cut back-to-school budget-poll

NEW YORK, July 27 (Reuters) – Fewer U.S. parents plan to cut their back-to-school budgets, but they will count on smartphones and social networking to find the best bargains during the second biggest shopping season of the year, according to a Deloitte survey released on Tuesday.

“Retailers may be encouraged that fewer consumers are planning to pare back this year, although they may find that shoppers continue to be deliberate in their purchases,” said Alison Paul, Deloitte’s retail sector leader in the United States.

In the online survey, 28 percent of 1,050 parents of school-age children said they were planning to spend more this year on back-to-school clothing and supplies, while 17 percent said they would spend less.

The survey showed that among households that expect to spend more, about 34 percent said their children needed more expensive items, such as computers, and more than 26 percent said school budget cuts meant parents needed to pay more for children’s items.

Back-to-school shopping trails only Christmas for the amount of money consumers spend in a season.

The survey was conducted between July 9 and 11, and has a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points.

This year, 58 percent of respondents said they would change the way they shop for back-to-school items by buying more items on sale or only items family members really needed.

Last year, 70 percent of the respondents said they expected to change the way they shopped because of the recession, down from 90 percent in 2008.

“The survey indicates that consumers’ recession-induced behaviors are beginning to wane as households seek to replenish certain items and worry less about the economy,” Paul said.

WHERE’S THE SALE?

Twenty-nine percent or 305 of the people surveyed said they planned to use mobile phones for price information, retailer advertisements and to find discounts and coupons.

An equal number of people said they would use social networking sites to find promotions, look at products, and read reviews and recommendations.

“Consumers are increasingly on the phone, online and on-the-go,” said Paul, adding that retailers using mobile applications, text alerts and video content may win an increased share of shoppers’ back-to-school budgets.

Discount stores were still the No. 1 shopping destination, with 89 percent of consumers surveyed saying they planned to shop at discount stores for back-to-school items.

According to the survey, 31 percent of consumers said they would shop at traditional department stores, up from 26 percent last year, and 23 percent cited specialty clothing stores, an increase of six percentage points over 2009.

After two consecutive years as the second most popular destination, dollar stores dropped to the third most popular destination behind office supply/technology stores. (Reporting by Dhanya Skariachan)

U.S. job availability jumps sharply vs. year ago: Monster

(Reuters) – A monthly gauge of online labor demand in the United States rose in June and is nearly 21 percent above the reading from a year ago, its highest growth rate in 45 months, a private research group said on Thursday.

Monster Worldwide Inc (MWW.N), an online careers and recruiting firm, said its employment index rose to 141 points in June from 134 in May. The current month’s reading is 20.5 percent above the 117 mark a year ago, the highest year-on-year growth reading since September 2006.

“While substantial job creation has yet to occur to reduce the existing levels of unemployment and underemployment, job availability is improved from where it was a year ago.” said Jesse Harriott, a senior vice president at Monster Worldwide.

The Monster index registered increases in 13 of 20 industries and 17 of 23 occupations monitored. Five categories remained flat in each.

Online job demand was higher in all nine U.S. census regions, with West North Central registering the largest increase.

The report comes ahead of the U.S. Labor Department’s release of weekly initial claims for unemployment benefits, due later on Thursday and expected at total 452,000 according to a Reuters poll of economists.

The government’s closely-watched payrolls report is due on Friday.

The Monster Employment index is a monthly analysis based on a selection of corporate career sites and job boards. The margin of error is approximately plus or minus 1 percent.

(Editing by Padraic Cassidy)

Santos well ahead for Colombian run-off vote: poll

(Reuters) – Colombian presidential candidate Juan Manuel Santos has a commanding lead against two-time Bogota Mayor Antanas Mockus for this month’s second round election, according to a new poll published on Friday.

World

Santos, a former defense minister, had 61.6 percent of the intended votes against Mockus with 29.8 percent, according to the Centro Nacional de Consultoria poll published in El Tiempo newspaper.

Santos won a solid first round victory on May 30, making him the favorite to be elected as successor to President Alvaro Uribe on June 20 when Colombians vote in the run-off.

Most polls before first round had shown Santos and Mockus, who ran on an anti-corruption platform, tied for the election. But Santos won 47 percent of the vote while Mockus received 22 percent.

Polls may have under-represented rural areas where Santos was seen as the stronger candidate.

Uribe, a staunch U.S. ally, steps down in August after two terms dominated by his war on leftist FARC guerrillas. Violence has eased and foreign investment increased five-fold since he first came to power in 2002.

Many Colombians thank him for making their country safer, but jobs and healthcare are now more of a concern than rebel violence. Some voters are also weary of corruption and human rights scandals that marred his second term.

Mockus, a former university professor known for his off-beat style, garnered support with his Green Party’s message of clean government. But analysts say his gaffes in debates and Santos’ political machinery helped give the Uribe ally the victory.

Whoever wins the run-off is expected to continue with Uribe’s basic security and pro-business policies and investors see little impact on the country’s peso or its TES bonds, the sixth most traded fixed income instrument in emerging markets outside home country.

The poll was carried out with 2,000 telephone interviews in 100 cities nationwide with a margin of error of 2.1 percentage points.

(Reporting by Patrick Markey; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Two polls suggest conservative Tea Party going mainstream

New York, Apr.7 (ANI): Two new polls suggest that the conservative ‘Tea Party’ movement might be going mainstream.

A Rasmussen poll released Monday found more Americans identify with the Tea Party groups than with President Obama, Fox News reports.

According to the survey, 48 percent of voters said the average Tea Party activist is more aligned with their views on major issues than the president.

Forty-four percent said Obama’s views are closer to theirs.

That came on top of a USA Today/Gallup poll that found more than a quarter of Americans affiliate themselves with the Tea Party movement.

The poll of 1,033 adults, conducted March 26-28, found 28 percent of people call themselves Tea Party supporters, while 26 percent call themselves opponents.

The survey also found that any one demographic group does not disproportionately dominate Tea Party supporters.

The characteristics of Tea Party supporters-in age, education, income and race-roughly follow the characteristics of the nation as a whole.

The Gallup poll had a margin of error of four percentage points, while the Rasmussen poll of 1,000 voters had a margin of error of three percentage points. (ANI)

Aquino’s lead widens in Philippine opinion poll

Philippine presidential candidate Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino has arrested a slide in support while his nearest rival, Manual “Manny” Villar, lost ground ahead of elections on May 10, an opinion poll showed on Monday.

The Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey, conducted on March 19-22 before the start of campaigning for Congress and local positions last Friday, also showed administration candidate Gilberto “Gibo” Tedoro remained a distant fourth in polling.

Support for opposition senator Aquino, son of the country’s democracy icon, Corazon “Cory” Aquino, stood at 37 percent, basically steady with his February reading of 36 percent although well below a support level of 60 percent last September.

Billionaire senator Villar dropped six points to 28 percent, and former president Joseph Estrada, forced out of office in 2001, saw his support rise four points to 19 percent.

Support for Teodoro, a former defence secretary in outgoing President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s administration, was unchanged at 6 percent, the SWS poll showed.

Major campaign issues are corruption, poverty and managing the economy and a large budget deficit.

Aquino portrays himself as a “change” candidate, promising to fight corruption, reform development spending and improve transparency, and has said he would investigate allegations of corruption against Arroyo.

His Liberal Party lacks the national scale of the ruling Lakas-Kampi coalition, whose grassroots organisation could boost Teodoro’s ratings now that local campaigning has started.

However, if Teodoro is unable to lift his ratings soon, analysts believe Arroyo’s supporters could swing behind Villar.

The SWS results are very similar to support levels in a late February poll by Pulse Asia, another independent pollster.

The opinion poll results were posted on the SWS website http://www.sws.org.ph/ The survey of 2,100 people has a 2 percent margin of error.

(Reporting by Manny Mogato; Editing by John Mair and Ron Popeski)

5 in 10 Americans consider health reform bill to be a ”good thing”

Washington, Mar. 24 (ANI): Almost five out of 10 Americans believe that President Barack Obama’s health care reform bill is a “good thing,” a new poll has revealed.

According to a Gallup poll, 49 percent of the 1,005 adults polled nationwide said that health reform was a “good thing” against 40 percent who said it was bad.

The poll also found that fifty percent of those surveyed were either “enthusiastic” or “pleased” by the bill’s passage, while 23 percent were “disappointed.” Nineteen percent said they were “angry.”

“Passage of health care reform was a clear political victory for President Obama and his allies in Congress,” Politico quoted Gallup’s Lydia Saad, as saying in her analysis of the survey.

Democrats favored the bill by wide margins, while Republicans expressed displeasure.

Forty-one percent of the self-identified Republicans polled said they were “angry” that the bill passed.

Independents, meanwhile, were split almost evenly. Forty-six percent said the bill was a “good thing,” compared to 45 percent who believed it was bad.

The margin of error was plus or minus 4 percentage points.

“While it also pleases most of his Democratic base nationwide, it is met with greater ambivalence among independents and with considerable antipathy among Republicans,” Saad wrote.

“Whether these groups” views on the issue harden, or soften, in the coming months could be crucial to how health care reform factors into this year’s midterm elections,” she added. (ANI)

Romney leads 2012 Republican presidential bid field

Washington, Mar.20 (ANI): Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney leads his Republican rivals for the party’s 2012 presidential nomination, according a new survey out Friday by Public Policy Polling.

According to Politico, Romney commands 28 percent of the 614 self-identified Republican primary voters polled by PPP.

Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee is placed second with 24 percent, followed by former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin at 23 percent and Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) at 11 percent. All four leading candidates ran for the party’s nomination in 2008.

Nine percent of those polled said they were undecided, and six percent preferred someone else.

Despite Romney’s lead in the horse race, Palin actually ranks as the most popular, with 69 percent of the Republican surveyed holding a favorable view of her. Fifty-seven percent said the same for Romney and 54 percent hold a favorable view of Huckabee.

Additionally, 43 percent of those surveyed believe Palin could beat President Barack Obama in a potential 2012 general election match-up. Thirty-eight percent do not think Palin could take down Obama, while 19 percent were not sure.

The poll was conducted March 12-14 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. (ANI)

Some Americans think opposition to Obama’s policies is based on racism

Washington, Sep. 18 (ANI): Some Americans, including former President Jimmy Carter, believe that those who are opposing US President Barrack Obama’s policies have a racial element against him instead of simple disagreement.

According to a recent Fox News poll, 65 percent Americans think that opposition to Obama’s policies is based on honest disagreements, while 20 percent say it is mostly motivated by racism.

However, Black voters are twice as likely to say the opposition is motivated by race, with 63 percent citing racism as the reason for opposition and 27 percent say it is based on honest disagreements.

Most white voters (71 percent) say the opposition comes from honest disagreements.

Most Republicans (87 percent) and independents (69 percent) believe that opposition to Obama’s policies is based on honest disagreements, while 48 percent Democrats say honest disagreements and 34 percent say it is motivated by racism, the poll found.

Opinion Dynamics Corp. conducted the national telephone poll of 900 registered voters with a 3-point margin of error.

The poll also found that 54 percent of Americans think Obama is a “new kind” of politician, while a large 39 percent minority says he is a “typical” politician.

As for Obama’s handling of health care, 44 percent approved and 48 percent disapproved.

Obama received better ratings on his handling of the economy (55 percent approve) and on the war in Afghanistan (51 percent).

By a wide 60 percent to 27 percent margin, Americans think the country has become more divided rather than more united since Obama took office in January, the poll found. (ANI)

Satellite images of night time lights offer better GDP Growth measurements

Washington, September 6 (ANI): Three Brown University economists have come up with a unique way for measuring economic growth in developing countries-using images of night time lights as seen from outer space.

In a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper, J. Vernon Henderson, Adam Storeygard, and David N. Weil point out that measurements of economic growth often fall short for developing countries, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, and are rarely calculated at all for cities throughout the world.

They say that it is possible to improve GDP estimates for such areas by using satellite images of night time lights.

The authors cite the Penn World Tables, one of the standard compilations of data on income, which rank countries with grades A through D by the quality of their GDP and price data.

They say that nearly all sub-Saharan African countries get a grade of C or D, which is interpreted as roughly 30 or 40 percent margin of error.

They also say that several countries-including Iraq, Myanmar, Somalia, and Liberia-do not appear in the table.

To improve these estimates, the three economists suggest combining measured income data with the changes observed in a country’s “night lights” as seen from outer space.

They use U.S. Air Force weather satellite picture composites to look at the changes that have occurred in a region’s light density over a 10-year period.

“Consumption of nearly all goods in the evening requires lights. As income rises, so does light usage per person, in both consumption activities and many investment activities,” they write.

Upon applying the novel method to countries with low-quality national income data, the researchers observed that their estimates were significantly different.

According to them, lights in the Democratic Republic of Congo suggested a 2.4-percent annual growth rate in GDP, while official estimates suggested a negative 2.6-percent growth over the same time period.

At the other end, Myanmar has an official growth rate of 8.6 percent a year, but the lights data imply only a 3.4-percent annual growth rate.

Henderson, Storeygard, and Weil say that they do not envision the lights density data as a replacement for official numbers.

They, however, insist that using the lights density in addition to existing data from agencies like the World Bank can lead to a better indicator of how these economies really are performing.

“Our hope is that people start using this, either when they don’t have actual data on economic growth … or when the numbers are pretty bad. This is just a way to get better estimates,” said Henderson, a professor of Economics. (ANI)

Obama’s health care reform less popular than Bill Clinton’s ’94 proposal

Washington, Aug. 28 (ANI): Americans are more sceptical about President Barack Obama’s health care reform than they were about Bill Clinton’s health care proposals in 1994, a survey conducted by a Republican polling firm has found.

Thirty seven percent of Americans are opposed to the Obama plan compared with 25 percent who favor it, a poll conducted by Public Opinion Strategies shows.

In June of 1994 – just a few months before a White House-led health care reform push effectively died on Capitol Hill – 35 percent of Americans said they opposed the Clinton administration’s plan while 23 percent favored it, Politico cited a survey conducted by the same firm, as saying.

But in 1994 as well as now, the polls showed that large numbers of Americans remain undecided about health care reform.

At that time, 42 percent of those surveyed said they had no opinion about Clinton’s plan and this August, 37 percent also had no opinion about Obama’s proposal.

The recent Public Opinion Strategies Poll surveyed 800 registered voters Aug. 11-13 and has a 3.5 percentage point margin of error.

The poll asked about Obama’s plan, but in reality, there are several versions of health care reform currently working their way through Congress.

Bill McInturff, a partner at the firm who poll-tested the “Harry and Louise” advertising campaign that played a key role in the defeat of the Clinton administration’s health care reform efforts in the 1990s, said that opposition to the Obama plan has been fuelled, in part, by the notion that “government has gotten way too big and is going way too far.”

McInturff also predicted that the death of Senator Ted Kennedy would not have much of a practical impact on the health care debate.

“Individual members will make those votes based on their own calculus, for their own situation and not as a memorial to his long and distinguished career,” McInturff said. (ANI)

Only four percent Israelis think Obama is pro-Israel: Poll

Jerusalem, Aug. 28 (ANI): Only four percent Israelis consider the policies of President Barack Obama as pro-Israel, a Smith Research poll conducted by The Jerusalem Post has revealed.

More than half (51 percent) of Jewish Israelis consider Obama’s administration more pro-Palestinian than pro-Israel, according to the survey, while 35 percent consider it neutral.

The support for Obama Administration has fallen 2 percent from an earlier poll published in the paper.

In June, 6 percent Israelis had viewed the policies of the Obama administration more pro-Palestinian than pro-Israeli, while less than four in 10 said the policies were neutral.

The poll of 500 people representing a statistical model of the Jewish Israeli population had a margin of error of 4.5 percent.

Obama’s popularity among Israelis has been plummeting since a May 17 Post poll on the eve of a meeting between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Obama at the White House.

The new poll was taken on Monday and Tuesday, before reports that Obama had agreed to exclude Jerusalem from a deal with Netanyahu on a construction freeze and to allow construction of essential public buildings, such as schools, to continue in Judea and Samaria.

The poll asked Jewish Israelis whether they would support freezing settlement construction for a year as part of an American-brokered deal.

Fifty percent said no, 41 percent said yes and 9 percent did not express an opinion. (ANI)

8 out of 10 Americans oppose Lockerbie bomber’s release

Washington, Aug. 25 (ANI): A whopping 82 percent of Americans oppose Scotland’s justice minister’s decision to release the convicted Lockerbie bomber, a new poll has found.

Last week, Baset not only set Abdel Baset al-Megrahi free but also allowed him to return to Libya on so-called compassionate grounds.

Megrahi, who is terminally ill with prostate cancer, was the only person convicted in the 1988 airline bombing that killed 270 people.

According to a Rasmussen Reports’ survey, majorities across every demographic category strongly disagreed with the decision.

Just 10 percent agreed with the decision, Fox News reports.

Sixty-three percent of adults said they followed news reports about the Lockerbie bomber.

The survey comes after a host of top U.S. officials have condemned the decision.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in an interview Sunday he was “appalled” by the move.

FBI Director Robert Mueller sent a letter to Scotland’s Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill saying the release “gives comfort to terrorists” around the world.

The survey, taken Saturday and Sunday, was based on interviews with 1,000 adults. The poll had a margin of error of 3 percentage points. (ANI)

Over half of Americans polled say Afghan war a wasted effort

Washington, Aug.21 (ANI): Despite President Barack Obama’s attempts to prepare the American people for rising casualties in Afghanistan, a new poll shows most Americans see the war as a wasted effort.

The Washington Post-ABC News poll showed 51 percent of people say the war is not worth fighting. That sentiment was particularly high among members of the president’s own party, with seven in 10 Democrats saying the war is not worth its costs.

Obama on Thursday again argued that U.S. forces need to commit themselves for the long haul, acknowledging that the influx of U.S. troops in the country has coincided with a sharp increase in casualties.

The poll of 1,001 adults was conducted Aug. 13-17. It had a margin of error of 3. (ANI)

Jacko’s death excessively covered, think most Americans

London, July 2 (ANI): Two thirds of Americans are of the view that late King of Pop Michael Jackson’s death has been excessively covered by the media, according to a survey.

Conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, the survey saw 1,000 people being questioned between June 26-29.

The poll revealed that about 29 per cent people believed that the coverage of Jackson’s sudden death was the “right amount”.owever, about 64 per cent of those polled said that the coverage was too much, reports the Sun.

According to Pew, African-Americans followed the death of Jackson more closely than the population as a whole, with eight in 10 blacks revealing that they followed the news of his death very closely compared with 22 per cent of whites.

About 70 per cent whites said that there had been too much coverage, compared with 36 per cent of blacks.

Pew said that the survey of some 1,000 Americans aged 18 years older had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. (ANI)

50 percent Israelis think Obama is more pro-Palestine than pro-Israel: Poll

Jerusalem, June 19 (ANI): A whopping 50 percent Israelis consider the policies of Obama’s administration more pro-Palestinian than pro-Israeli, while 36 percent said the policies were neutral, a new poll has found.

A new Jerusalem Post-sponsored Smith Research poll also found that only six percent of Jewish Israelis think that US President Barack Obama’s administration is pro-Israel.

The recent views expressed by Israelis follow Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s speech in support of a demilitarised Palestinian state.

The views were in stark contrast to the last poll published on May 17, on the eve of the meeting between Netanyahu and Obama at the White House.

A total of 31 percent had labelled the Obama administration pro-Israel, while 14 percent considered it pro-Palestinian and 40 percent said it was neutral.

The poll, which has a margin of error of 4.5percent, was conducted among a representative sample of 500 Israeli Jewish adults this week, The Jerusalem Post reports.

One possible explanation for the Obama administration’s plummeting approval rating among Israelis, is its opposition to building for natural growth in settlement blocs, and its refusal to differentiate its policies regarding construction in unauthorized outposts, settlement blocs close to the Green Line and suburbs of Jerusalem.

Regarding outposts, 57 percent favor removing them, 38 percent are against, and 5 percent did not express an opinion.

Reacting to the poll, Netanyahu’s external adviser Zalman Shoval questioned whether the Obama administration could mediate in the Middle East conflict due to the numbers and its recent statements and actions.

“Some of the indications we have seen in the last few weeks make it more difficult for Israelis to see the US in its traditional role as an honest broker. The vast majority of Israelis don’t blame the prime minister for a confrontation with the US. They are putting the onus on the Obama administration,” he said. (ANI)

Jordanians dissatisfied with parliament’s performance: poll

Amman – The majority of Jordanians are dissatisfied with the performance of the lower house of parliament since its election two years ago – and one quarter would like to see the dissolution of the chamber, according to a poll published Thursday.

The survey, which was conducted by the state-funded Centre for Strategic Studies (CSS) at the University of Jordan, showed that 53 per cent of citizens were critical of the house’s performance in general while 56 per cent said that they were not satisfied with the deputies representing them.

The survey is set to fuel calls by the Islamic-led opposition and the press for the dissolution of the lower house, observers said.

The poll also revealed public conviction that the 110-member house had failed to address key local problems, mainly corruption, restricted freedoms and economies woes.

At least 71 per cent of respondents said they were unable to name achievements by the house over the past two years since its election, which was marred by accusations of rigging and vote buying.

“The inability of people to name any achievements of the incumbent house and the negative feedback on its performance means that the general public are not optimistic that lawmakers will live up to the expectations of citizens” in the remaining two years of the chamber’s life, said pollster Mohammad Masri.

“Only one-third of the public still believes the house’s performance could improve,” he added.

Masri warned that the retreating confidence in the House of Representatives could “reflect negatively on other institutions in the country”.

The poll involved in-person interviews with 1,764 respondents out of 1,830 people. Sixty six refused to respond, while the margin of error was put at 2 per cent. (dpa)

For the first time in 15 years, most Americans are pro-life

Washington, May 16 (ANI): Fifty-one percent of Americans consider themselves “pro-life” and just 42 percent say they are “pro-choice.”

This is the first time a majority in the country has stated a personal objection to abortion since Gallup polls began tracking the data 15 years ago, Fox News reports.

The numbers correspond with FOX News polls this month showing 49 percent of Americans as pro-life and 43 percent as pro-choice on abortion. Last year the numbers were essentially the reverse of the current findings: 41 percent were pro-life and 49 percent were pro-choice in September 2008.

The Gallup poll released Friday also marks a massive shift from one year ago, when 50 percent of Americans called themselves pro-choice, and just 44 percent said they were pro-life. Today 42 percent say they are pro-choice, by far the lowest level of support for abortion ever measured by the Gallup poll.

Despite that change in opinion, most Americans still believe that abortion should remain legal. Fifty-three percent say abortions should remain legal under certain circumstances, and nearly equal numbers take hard-line views — 23 percent say it should be illegal in all circumstances, and 22 percent say it should be legal no matter what.

The sample study of 1,015 adults was conducted from May 7-10 and has a margin of error of three points. (ANI)

Michelle Obama more popular than Barack: Survey

Chicago, Apr 24 (ANI): US President Barack Obama’s approval rating might be strong, but a new survey has revealed that first lady Michelle is more popular than him.

In the USA TODAY/Gallup Poll survey, 79 percent people said they approve of the way Michelle Obama is handling the job of first lady. This tops her husband’s approval rating of 64 percent.

When asked about the first lady’s stronger showing, White House adviser David Axelrod joked in an interview, “Fortunately, she’s agreed not to run.”

While Barack’s rating shows a sharp partisan divide, Michelle’s appeal crosses party lines, reports The Chicago Sun Times.

Almost every Democrat expresses approval, 94 percent-1 percent.Even among Republicans, her approval rating is a muscular 64 percent-17 percent.

The poll of 1,051 adults has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. (ANI)

U.S. workers want job reviews changed, survey says

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Four out of five U.S. workers are dissatisfied with their job performance reviews and would like to see them better reflect their work, said a survey released on Tuesday.

A third of those workers would like to see the reviews tied to compensation, and a fifth said they would like the reviews to be more fair, said the survey conducted for Taleo Corp., a provider of talent management solutions.

Overall, 78 percent of U.S. workers want to change some aspect of the review process, the study said.

Sixteen percent of workers would like the reviews to be conducted more often, while 11 percent want to get rid of them altogether, it said. Fifteen percent said they would not want to see any changes.

“In the current economy, job performance is front and center of the corporate agenda. So it’s not surprising that this is an area where American workers want to seize greater control,” said Alice Snell, vice president of Taleo Research.

Five percent of those surveyed said they did not have performance reviews at their jobs. Two-thirds said they last had a performance review in the past year.

The random nationwide telephone survey was conducted among 881 employed adults for Dublin, California-based Taleo by KRC Research from March 12 to March 16, 2009.

It had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

Over five in ten Americans support military elimination of North Korean nukes

Washington, Apr.6 (ANI): Following North Korea’s launch of its controversial Taepodong-II missile, a majority of American voters have said that they would support a military approach to eliminate North Korea’s nuclear capabilities.

According to a Rasmussen Reports survey released Sunday morning, 57 percent of all voters support such a response, while just 15 percent oppose it.

A military response is favored by a majority in both parties – 66 percent of Republicans and 52 percent of Democrats – and by 57 percent of both men and women, said the survey that was conducted in the two days prior to the test missile launch.

According to Politico, 51 percent of the respondents oppose the U.S. offering economic aid to North Korea in exchange for it agreeing to dismantle its nuclear program.

On Sunday, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich told “Fox News Sunday” that he would have disabled the long-range missile before North Korea was able to launch it.

In what seemed to be a swipe at the Obama administration’s response, he warned, “One morning, just like 9/11, there’s going to be a disaster,” adding, “I have yet to see the United Nations do anything effective with either Iran or North Korea.”

The telephone survey of 1,000 likely voters has a three-percentage-point margin of error. (ANI)