By Mark John

LONDON, May 20 (Reuters) – People in the world’s leading economies remain overwhelmingly nervous about returning to life as normal, even after having being vaccinated against COVID-19, a survey released on Thursday found.

A mid-year update of the Edelman Trust Barometer, which for two decades has polled thousands of people on their trust in core institutions, suggested that 65% of people described themselves as being “still in a pandemic mindset”.

Concretely, that meant that only 16% felt safe flying commercial airlines, 23% staying in hotels and 28% dining indoors in restaurants. In each case, those tallies rose only slightly among those who had been fully vaccinated.

“Vaccines have produced just an average 5% bump in return-to-life readiness. Nearly 7 in 10 (of all respondents) are concerned a new outbreak is around the corner,” the survey commentary concluded.

The survey of 16,800 people in 14 territories – Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, United Arab Emirates, Britain and the United States – was conducted between April 30 and May 11.

The findings may raise doubts about the theory of some policy-makers that pent-up demand will power the world’s leading economies to strong recoveries in the months to come.

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They also indicate people around the world have little regard for their governments’ handling of the crisis, with the leadership in only four out of the 14 countries – China, Saudi Arabia, UAE and India – getting solid approval.

In the case of India, whose hospitals are struggling with the world’s highest number of daily coronavirus infections, trust levels stood at a solid 77%, albeit 2% points down on the January 2021 reading.

Other polls have shown Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s approval ratings falling to a new low as the country battles the pandemic.

The Edelman survey also suggested many believe the pandemic will leave longer-lasting societal problems in its wake: 55% said increased mental problems would be one legacy, and a similar number believed another would be the permanent loss of jobs. (Editing by Carmel Crimmins)

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