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Ipsos Update - November 2020
This month’s round-up of research and analysis from Ipsos around the world presents new papers on our learnings from the pandemic, trust in the media, brands and advertising and automotive quality. Explore our new global survey on happiness, the latest ranking of 50 nations’ international image, and much more.
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Social Cohesion is under assault globally
Ipsos research finds that almost twice as many global citizens are “weak” than “solid” in their sense of social cohesion
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Germany Retains Top “Nation Brand” Ranking, the UK and Canada Round Out the Top Three
U.K. moves to second place, its best performance ever recorded, with reputational gains on the Governance, Culture, People, and Tourism Indices. Canada ranks in third place for a second consecutive year.
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Outside the U.S., Biden is the clear favorite
In most of 24 countries surveyed, more would vote for Biden than for Trump in the U.S. presidential election and expect Biden to win it; but many are concerned about the impact of fake news.
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Job loss is a concern for half of workers across the world
Job insecurity and ability to the learn essential new skills on the job vary widely across countries.
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Global majority seeks trustworthy news but may be vulnerable to disinformation
Ipsos research for the Trust Project finds limited appetite to pay for news and more confidence in one’s own acumen about the reliability of sources than in other people’s.
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The state of happiness in a COVID world
Global Happiness 2020 survey shows happiness has receded in many, but not all countries since last year.
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Ipsos Update - October 2020
Our new brand growth story, the future of money, fractures in French society and a special on the US election all feature in our latest monthly round-up of research and thinking from Ipsos around the world.
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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.