Britons are also the only country to have a net negative view of coach travel
A new international YouGov survey, conducted in 12 countries, looks at favourability towards having to travel by ten forms of transportation (including walking).
Walking is the most favourable way of getting about in most countries, although notably not in the US where the 74% with a positive opinion of getting around on foot is lower than the 77% for driving in a car or the 81% for being a passenger in a car. This is also the lowest favourability score for walking of all the countries in the study.
That Americans are less likely to favour walking than other countries is perhaps unsurprising when you account for how difficult it is to get anywhere by walking in American cities. According to the organization Walk Score, out of the 130 American cities with populations of 200,000 or more, 90 are branded ‘car dependent’, with most daily errands requiring a car to complete.
Americans aren’t the only country where walking doesn’t top the transport list: in Singapore people have slightly more positive attitudes towards being a car passenger (86%), or taking the train (85%) or bus (82%) than walking (80%).
As well as having the lowest favourability towards walking, Americans are also the least likely to have a favourable view of travelling by public bus (32%), subway or metro (35%), coach (or ‘charter bus’ to Americans, 39%) and train (59%). Indeed, Americans are the only nationality to have a net negative view of subway travel (-8) and particularly so for having to use a public bus (-23).
The 77% of Americans who have a favourable view of driving a car is among the highest of the survey - slightly behind Australia’s 81%, and similar to Canada’s and Italy’s 77%, Spain’s 76%, and Sweden and Poland’s 74%.
Singaporeans, by contrast, have a far less positive view of having to drive in a car than all the other countries surveyed, with 54% expressing a positive opinion at the prospect and 29% a negative one. This is no surprise given the city-state’s frequent traffic jams, expensive car ownership system, and aggressive drivers.
On your bike… but not in Britain
Britain has the most negative view of travelling by bicycle, being the only country with a net negative view overall, although at -4 this means Britons are effectively divided (43% positive vs 46% negative). This is a far cry from the 80% of Poles who have a favourable view of getting around by bike, making them the most pro-cycling country.
Britons are also only country to have a negative opinion overall of coach travel. While the 42% with a favourable view of having to catch a coach isn’t quite the lowest level, it is outbalanced by the 48% who have an unfavourable view – the highest of any country.
Despite perennial grumbling about train services in Britain, the nation does not rate bottom for the form of transport. That honour goes to Germany, where 59% of people have a favourable view of trains compared to 33% a negative one. The same number of Americans have a favourable view of train travel (59%), although they are less likely to have an unfavourable view (23%).
In Britain, 65% of people have a positive opinion of taking the train, compared to 28% with a negative opinion.
Germans join Americans in having the lowest proportion of people who have a favourable view of walking (74%), although unlike in the US this score makes it the most popular way of getting around.
Germans and French people have the least favourable opinion of travelling by car as a passenger. Seven in ten in each country (70% and 71%, respectively) have a positive view, but 20% in Germany and 23% in France have a negative view.
Photo: Getty