Spaniards claim to be quite satisfied with their family life, rating it with a not inconsiderable ‘notable’, according to the first survey by the Sociological Research Center (CIS) that stops to analyze the ‘Support Networks’ that citizens have.
To gather this data, the CIS has carried out 4,003 interviews, from October 1 to 11. From them, it is clear that Spaniards give an 8.66 out of 10 to their family life and family relationships. Likewise, they rate the satisfaction they have with their friends at 8.12, and with their romantic relationship, a 7.58.
Regarding satisfaction with their own health, Spaniards also consider that it is not bad, with a 7.52. And finally, regarding the free time they have, respondents also feel satisfied with a 7.24.
Conciliation is the pending issue for those surveyed, who do not hesitate to rate the need for their support networks and the help they provide them with an 8.91 out of 10. Grandparents who go to pick up their grandchildren, neighbors who support sudden demands. That support is highly valued. If the age variable is observed, the highest average in considering the family as the main support group is young people between 18 and 24 years old, with 9.12; people between 25 and 34 years old, with 9.11; and people over 75 years of age, with a 9.10.
Regarding subjective class identification, the highest means in relation to family support are found in the upper and upper middle class with 9.28; and the middle-middle class with a 9.14.
Secondly, the support network that they can count on the most if they need it are friends, with a 7.95; then work or study colleagues, with a 6.42, and, finally, neighbors, with a 6.23.
In another section of the same survey, the CIS evaluates where work is sought. The offices of the State Public Employment Service (SEPE) and websites such as Infojobs or Linkedin They are the method most used by citizens to find work today.
Specifically, of the population surveyed by the CIS that is currently unemployed, half, 49.9%, look for work through public employment services, while 45.4% do so through pages such as Infojobs. or LindkedIn. The next option, already with 26.1%, is to go personally to the companies and present the resume directly.
From there, people choose to look for work through friends (17.2%), acquaintances (15.7%), through a temporary employment agency (14.3%) or through a direct family member (13.4%).
The survey also asks people who are working about how they got their job. 18.2% of people found their job by going to the company in person and submitting their CV, while 14.4% did so through a competitive examination or a transfer competition, 13.5% got it because they became self-employed and 11.1% found it on a job search page.
The study reveals that, of the people who work, 89% see “little” or “not at all likely” that they will lose their job in the next twelve months, while, among the unemployed, there is a division of opinion: 49.8% believe it is “very likely” to find a job, compared to 46.7% who see it as unlikely or not at all likely.
#Spaniards #give #marks #friends #partners #put #notable #stop #family #life