skip to main content

Gallup Daily

No updates March 28. Next update March 29.
Real Unemployment 8.4% -0.2
Gallup Good Jobs 46.5% +0.1
Engaged at Work 32.0% -0.2
Economic Confidence 3 -2
Consumer Spending $127 +16
Trump Approval 37% -
Updates daily at 1 p.m. ET; reflects one-day change

1 in 5 people worldwide experienced a lot of anger yesterday.

by Frank Newport

Americans may be as focused at this point on how their elected representatives are going about the process of passing a new health law as they are on the legislation itself.

Ronald Reagan's 1985 visit to a German WWII military cemetery sparked a political firestorm in the U.S.

by V. Lance Tarrance

While skeptics have a point in doubting tax reform can happen this year, the president, and now Paul Ryan, insist it will. Public support for middle-class tax relief, particularly from the GOP rank and file, works in reform's favor.

by Jon Clifton

Nearly 150 million people -- or 4% of the world's adult population -- want to move to the U.S.

by Jon Clifton

Americans' feeling of freedom is declining. This drop -- dramatic in the U.S. -- isn't happening in other wealthy democracies.

by Annamarie Mann

Open office floor plans are effective when they keep in mind human nature and employees' needs.

by Jon Clifton

Gallup's 2017 Global Emotions Report quantifies how the world is feeling.

by Jaimie Francis and Zac Auter

How to fix the misalignment between the talents employers demand and the skills graduates have as they enter the workforce.

51% of U.S. adults would change at least one of their education decisions.

by Valerie J. Calderon

Getting to do what they do best at school every day helps to engage students with school today and prepare them for the future.

by Jim Clifton

What the whole world wants is a good job, and we are failing to deliver it.

Majorities of U.S. investors are taking each of eight actions that can contribute to financial health, but they are far more likely to be doing some than others.

by Frank Newport

President Trump's budget proposal calls for trillions of dollars in government cuts, but Americans' real priority is for Congress first to fix the way it operates and then to debate government funding.