Irish trust in Government and EU has halved since spring
The latest Eurobarometer survey shows Ireland has second lowest levels of trust in the EU, with support dropping from 40% to 24%, well below the EU average of 34%.
The percentage who tend not to trust the EU has also risen by 21 points to 60%. Trust in the EU is highest in Bulgaria at 59% and lowest in Britain at 17%.
Trust in the Government has also dropped to 22%, a drop of 20% since spring, but is close to the EU average of 24%.
People in Luxembourg (68%) were most likely to trust their government and people in Greece least (8%).
However, trust in political parties in Ireland was up slightly to 13% compared EU average of 14%.
Only 3% of Irish people think the current state of the Irish economy is good, the second lowest in Europe after Greece, where only 1% think their economy is good, and just below Spain where it is 4%.
In total, 96% of Irish people think the economic situation is bad, the second highest in Europe after Greece at 99%.
Across the EU, 71% of people think the situation of their national economy is bad, but in some countries, such as Sweden (14%), Luxembourg (15%), and Germany (20%), rates are a lot lower.
There is a growing public realisation here that the solution to the crisis is a long way down the line, with just 29% feeling that its impact on jobs has reached its peak, while 65% think that the opposite is the case.
This compares to EU averages of 23% and 68%. People in Estonia (40%), Bulgaria (38%), Austria (36%) and Latvia (35%) are most likely to think the impact of the crisis had already reached its peak and respondents in Cyprus (16%), Britain (16%) and Portugal (11%) least likely.
In terms of policies to tackle the financial crisis, about 92% of Irish people believed the introduction of a tax on bank profits would be an effective measure.
When asked whether they were for or against a European economic and monetary union with one single currency, the euro, 78% of Irish people were for, well above the EU average of 53%.