Q, Over the next 12 months do you think your personal financial situation will get better, get worse or stay much the same?
28 Jun 10 |
18 Oct 10 |
4 April 11 |
4 Jul 11 |
3 Oct 11 |
26 Mar 12 |
Vote Labor |
Vote Lib/Nat |
Vote Greens |
|
Total better |
29% |
33% |
32% |
28% |
24% |
28% |
34% |
25% |
36% |
Total worse |
31% |
29% |
31% |
36% |
41% |
37% |
29% |
42% |
34% |
Get a lot better |
5% |
6% |
7% |
5% |
4% |
5% |
5% |
4% |
14% |
Get a little better |
24% |
27% |
25% |
23% |
20% |
23% |
29% |
21% |
22% |
Get a little worse |
21% |
21% |
22% |
23% |
27% |
27% |
22% |
30% |
27% |
Get a lot worse |
10% |
8% |
9% |
13% |
14% |
10% |
7% |
12% |
7% |
Stay much the same |
37% |
32% |
32% |
32% |
32% |
29% |
32% |
31% |
25% |
No opinion |
4% |
5% |
5% |
3% |
3% |
5% |
5% |
2% |
5% |
28% (up 4% since October last year) of respondents believe that their personal financial situation will get better in the next 12 months and 37% worse (down 4%). 29% (down 3%) expect it to stay much the same. However, these results are very similar to those of July 2011.
Greens voters (36% better) and Labor voters (34%) are the most likely to believe that their personal financial situation will get better over the next 12 months, whereas Coalition voters are the most likely to believe that theirs will get worse (42%).
People on lower incomes were more pessimistic about their personal financial outlook – those earning under $600 per week split 22% better/49% worse – compared to those earning more than $1,600pw who split 36%better/30% worse.