World Economic Forum


Nachhaltigkeit Veröffentlichung

Scratching the surface on the environment using social intelligence

The global pandemic seems to have overshadowed our attention to the climate… or has it?

Opinions about AI vary depending on countries’ level of economic development

Ipsos survey for the World Economic Forum unveils mix of positive feelings and concerns about AI’s impact on people’s lives.

The impact of race, ethnicity, and national origin on opportunities: Perceptions and personal experience

Survey for the World Economic Forum explores how much access to employment, education, housing, and social services is influenced by ethnicity and national origin across 27 countries
Gesellschaft Umfrage

Higher education is widely expected to move online

Survey for the World Economic Forum finds divergent views about the cost of in-person higher education among 29 countries.
Gesellschaft Umfrage

Around the world, people yearn for significant change rather than a return to a “pre-COVID normal”

A new global Ipsos survey for the World Economic Forum unveils a profound and widespread desire for change rather than a return to how things were before the COVID-19 pandemic.
Coronavirus Umfrage

Three in four adults globally say they’d get a vaccine for COVID -19

Most do not expect any will be available before the end of year; fear of side effects is top reason for not wanting to take the vaccine.

Global public evenly divided on limiting recovery aid to the green economy

A new Ipsos survey, on behalf of the World Economic Forum, looks at post-COVID-19 stimulus packages.
Coronavirus Umfrage

Ipsos partners with the Africa Centre for Disease Control (CDC) and Resolve to Save Lives to develop guidelines for adapted Covid-19 preventive measures

This is the first project to come out of the World Economic Forum’s Covid-19 Action Platform with support from the World Health Organisation. Purpose of the collaboration is to support governments to help flatten the Covid-19 curve and minimise social and economic slowdown.

Only one third of workers expect their job to be automated

Ipsos' survey for the World Economic Forum finds most employed adults across the world trust they have the skills needed to weather automation.