Davos elite faces evaporating trust in 'post-truth' era: Report

The majority of people now believe the economic and political system is failing them, according to the annual Edelman Trust Barometer, released on Monday (Jan 16) ahead of the Jan 17-20 World Economic Forum. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

DAVOS, SWITZERLAND (REUTERS) - Trust in governments, companies and the media plunged last year as ballots from the United States to Britain to the Philippines rocked political establishments and scandals hit business.

The majority of people now believe the economic and political system is failing them, according to the annual Edelman Trust Barometer, released on Monday (Jan 16) ahead of the Jan 17-20 World Economic Forum (WEF).

"There's a sense that the system is broken," Mr Richard Edelman, head of the communications marketing firm that commissioned the research, told Reuters. "The most shocking statistic of this whole study is that half the people who are high-income, college-educated and well-informed also believe the system doesn't work."

The 3,000 business, political and academic leaders meeting in the Swiss Alps this week find themselves increasingly out of step with many voters and populist leaders around the world who distrust elites.

Governments and the media are now trusted by only 41 per cent and 43 per cent of people respectively, with confidence in news outlets down particularly sharply after a year in which "post-truth" become the Oxford Dictionaries Word of the Year.

Trust in business was slightly higher, at 52 per cent, but it too has declined amid scandals, including Volkswagen's rigged diesel emission tests and Samsung Electronics' fire-prone smartphones.

The credibility of chief executives has fallen in every country surveyed, reaching a low of 18 per cent in Japan, while the German figure was 28 per cent and the US 38 per cent.

Trust in governments fell in 14 of the countries surveyed, with South Africa, where Davos regular President Jacob Zuma has faced persistent corruption allegations, ranked bottom with just 15 per cent support.

As the first Chinese president to attend the WEF's annual forum in Davos, Mr Xi Jinping may be reassured to learn that his government was ranked as the most trusted, with a 76 per cent rating among those questioned.

The annual survey, which has been running since 2001, took the opinions of 33,000 people in 28 countries from Oct 13 to Nov 16 last year.

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