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Americans Say Foreign Policy Knowledge Is Vital, Flunk Quiz

Americans Say Foreign Policy Knowledge Is Vital, Flunk Quiz

(Bloomberg) -- Americans overwhelmingly agree that knowledge about geography and foreign policy is important in their lives. You wouldn’t know it by looking at their test scores.

The Council on Foreign Relations and the National Geographic Society commissioned Gallup to survey some 2,500 Americans for their thoughts and aptitude on international issues. While seven in 10 respondents said such knowledge was important, just 6% scored an 80% or more on the quiz.

Men answered 60% of the questions correctly, beating the 47% average for women. Men are more consistent followers of news, while women tend to tune in when an important event occurs, the survey found. Seniors, some of whom have more time on their hands, are the most avid consumers of international news.

Americans Say Foreign Policy Knowledge Is Vital, Flunk Quiz

Americans who rely solely on the internet and television to keep up with issues had lower quiz scores than those who said they turned to a variety of media including books, magazines and the radio, according to the study.

People who labeled themselves as politically independent scored 3 percentage points higher on the quiz than Democrats (53%) and Republicans (52%).

Trade, illegal immigration and climate change were cited as the top international issues of concern to the respondents.

“People who said climate change was important to them were very knowledgeable on the subject,” said Jeff Jones, Gallup’s research director on the study. “It takes some initiative to be informed.”

Republicans were twice as likely as Democrats to include illegal immigration as one of their biggest worries. Conversely, 94% of Democrats and 68% of independents, but only 22% of Republicans, said climate change was a very serious or moderately serious threat, according to the research.

Some Agreement

Party politics aside, 76% of Americans said trading with other countries is beneficial and nearly everybody (88%) agreed that it’s preferable for the U.S. to act multilaterally, rather than unilaterally, on the world stage.

Those results come as President Donald Trump, a self-described “Tariff Man,” wages trade disputes against a number of partners, from China and the European Union to Brazil and Argentina.

Joe Biden, a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, attempted to focus the 2020 campaign on foreign policy issues this week in a campaign video that contended “the world is laughing at” Trump. The ad included footage shot at the NATO meeting in London in which other world leaders, including Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and French President Emmanuel Macron, appeared to be joking at Trump’s expense.

--With assistance from Alex Tanzi.

To contact the reporter on this story: Virginia Van Natta in San Francisco at vvannatta@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Linus Chua at lchua@bloomberg.net, Ros Krasny, Dan Reichl

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