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Half (47%) of Canadians are More Likely to Make a Debit Purchase if the Transaction Were Waived From Monthly Transaction Limit
Two in three Canadians aged 18-34 are more likely to make a debit purchase if the transaction fee were waived.
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What Gen Z and Their Friends Are Saying About Fashion - Insights From Social Data
From converging/emerging channels, COVID and supply chain disruption, to the rising impact of social media platforms, it’s never been more important to keep up with evolving consumer perceptions and demands.
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Ipsos Update – August 2022
With recent record-high temperatures in Europe in mind, Ben Page introduces this month’s edition with reflections on whether the more urgent threat of inflation threatens to overshadow the global public’s concern about climate change.
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In Wake of Roe v Wade, Canadians Becoming Firmer in Their Conviction for a Women’s Right to Choose
Majority (56%, Up 13 Points since 2010) Support Access to Abortion Whenever a Woman Decides She Wants One; Only One in Four (25%) Want Issue Re-Opened in Canada
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Canadians More Favourable Towards Charest; But CPC Voters Slightly Prefer Poilievre
If They Could Vote for the Next CPC Leader, Canadians Would Choose Charest, but Conservative Voters Would Elect Poilievre
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Almost three-in-ten citizens globally say they have started a business at some point
Entrepreneurialism is the spawning ground for small businesses which we know help drive the health of most economies. Small businesses took the brunt of pandemic shut downs and are now only recovering. So, what does the spawning ground look like now?
A new 26-country Ipsos poll finds that entrepreneurial activity is alive and well in some countries but lacking in others. -
Untapped Potential: Entrepreneurialism in Inflationary Times
Our Ipsos entrepreneurialism study shows that there is significant untapped potential for entrepreneurial activity moving further into 2022 and beyond.
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Continued Strong Support for COVID-19 Boosters Among Canadians
Nearly Seven in Ten (67%) of Those Vaccinated Without Boosters Say They’re Concerned About Long-Term Effects of COVID Booster Shots
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Why All Companies Need To Care About Misinformation
All industries face some risk from misinformation—understanding the underlying drivers of trust and working to strengthen performance against these items can build benefit of the doubt and mitigate this risk.
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Six in Ten (58%) Canadians Avoiding Airports Until Situation Improves as Seven in Ten (70%) Call Situation a National Embarrassment
Plenty of Blame to Go Around as Four in Ten (39%) Say Federal Government, Airlines and Airports and Passengers Equally Share the Blame for Delays