A CBS News poll conducted June 10 and 11, 2006, among a
nationwide random sample of 651 adults, asked those adults about
their party affiliation (Democrat, Republican or none) and their
opinion of how the US economy was changing ("getting better,"
"getting worse" or "about the same"). The results are shown in the
table below.
better | same | worse | |
Republican | 38 | 104 | 44 |
Democrat | 12 | 87 | 137 |
none | 21 | 90 | 118 |
Express each of your first five answers as a decimal and round to
the nearest 0.001 (in other words, type 0.123, not 12.3% or
0.123456).
What fraction of survey respondents identified themselves as
Democrats?
What fraction of survey respondents thought the economy was about
the same?
What fraction of Democrats thought the economy was about the
same?
Among survey respondents who thought the economy was about the
same, what fraction were Democrats?
What fraction of survey respondents were Democrats who thought the
economy was about the same?
The three pie charts below show the opinions about the economy for
each of party:
Democrats
36.9%58.1%gettingbetter5.1%about thesame36.9%gettingworse58.1%
Data | Percentage |
---|---|
getting better | 0.051 |
about the same | 0.369 |
getting worse | 0.581 |
Republicans
20.4%23.7%55.9%gettingbetter20.4%about
thesame55.9%gettingworse23.7%
Data | Percentage |
---|---|
getting better | 0.204 |
about the same | 0.559 |
getting worse | 0.237 |
none
39.3%51.5%gettingbetter9.2%about thesame39.3%gettingworse51.5%
Data | Percentage |
---|---|
getting better | 0.092 |
about the same | 0.393 |
getting worse | 0.515 |
Based on these pie charts, is there evidence that opinion about the economy is independent of party affiliation? Choose the statement below that best answers this question.
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