America This Week: Women Use Cannabis on the Down Low, Do We Need a Wealth Cap? Small Biz Rising, and Holiday Decorations That Just Won't Come Down
John Gerzema
CEO @ The Harris Poll | NYT Bestselling Author, Pollster and Strategist.
The latest trends in culture and society from The Harris Poll?
Good morning from La Guardia, my home away from home.?
The question of 2023 is, what's worse, inflation or recession??The Fed is set at 2 pm EDT to decide on another rate hike as the nation roils with a regional banking crisis and additional layoffs from Amazon to ESPN. Our America This Week survey, fielded March 17th to 19th among 2,054 Americans (1,108 employed), finds Gen Z and Millennial workers especially worried about losing their jobs this week (61%, 63%, up 11%-pts and 7%-pts from last week, respectively).?
Here's what else we're polling at Harris this week:
These stories are below. And check out the America This Week monthly summary slide deck and tabs . Download the February report here .?
Have a great rest of the week.?
John [email protected]
1. Women Are Secret Cannabis Users: MedMen Enterprises-Harris Poll
A new Harris survey with MedMen in Forbes finds that many American women are now using cannabis but keeping it to themselves.
Takeaway: "We know first-hand from our female-identifying employees and customers that women are increasingly turning to cannabis for their health and wellness needs," says Karen Torres, chief product officer at MedMen. "However, it's clear that stigmas persist and inhibit us from sharing our experiences freely. Fortunately, this research confirms that cannabis use has become a popular form of self-care, particularly among women seeking holistic solutions to help manage pain and anxiety or to unwind."
2. Millennials Most Likely To Want to Cap Personal Wealth: Fast Company-Harris Poll
Despite mounting anxieties over the country's growing income divide, limiting how much Americans should be allowed to earn has never gained much traction for cultural reasons. However, in our new poll with Fast Company , Millennials are the cohort most likely to support a socialist-capitalist model in the U.S.
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Takeaway: Millennial willingness for wealth gaps may be attributed to their lived economic experiences: Once the pandemic years are included, the average millennial has experienced the slowest-ever rate of U.S. economic growth since entering the workforce, saddling them with worse earnings, therefore less wealth, and delayed mileposts of success, such as opening retirement accounts or buying their first homes. Oh, and remember about student loan debt??
3. In This Economy, Some Look To Be Their Bosses: HoneyBook-Harris Poll
With the aforementioned growing layoffs in the tech sector, another new Harris poll with HoneyBook finds that current economic uncertainty is nudging more workers into self-employment in 2023. And it's not only about job security. Independent business owners have more pride in their work and satisfaction with their job since becoming their bosses.
Takeaway: "It takes courage and passion for starting an independent business, but the rewards are significant both financially and personally," says HoneyBook co-founder and CEO Oz Alon. "Anecdotal evidence has told us for a long time that autonomy over one's career, flexibility with one's time, and financial gains are among the chief benefits of being an independent business owner, and now we have the data to prove it."
4. What is Too Long For Holiday Decorations? Grid-Harris Poll
Skelly the Skeleton was such a huge hit last Halloween that your neighbor kept the twelve-foot-tall fixture on display throughout winter holidays, donning a turkey leg for Thanksgiving, a Santa suit for Christmas, and a leprechaun outfit for St. Patrick's Day. But fighting back are neighbors and neighborhood associations who won't tolerate leaving holiday décor on display longer than usual.
We asked Americans what is acceptable versus tacky. And for the majority of Americans, winter holiday decorations are out of sight, out of mind by around the New Year, with three in five taking down their outdoor seasonal decor within a week of the holidays:
Takeaway: "Some are so tied to their home décor (or maybe finding their inner rebel) that they've gone to great lengths, such as dressing up their oversized Halloween skeleton (fondly known as Indiana Bones) and moving it from yard to yard, like one Florida household did to avoid fines . But if you're not willing to find the HOA loopholes, it may be worth checking how long your 12-foot pal, inflatable snowman or sparkly life-size reindeer will be welcome to the neighborhood — and if you have a storage plan in place" (Grid).?
Head of Marketing at Flodesk + USA Today Bestselling Author
1 年In This Economy, Some Look To Be Their Bosses – thanks for highlighting the rise of independent business owners. ??
Senior Manager @ NBCUniversal | Streaming DTC Platforms, Content Production
1 年“Everything is collapsing” seems to be the general opinion trendline for these lately ??