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Ipsos Update - July 2020
This month’s edition of Ipsos Update brings you a round-up of the latest research and analysis from Ipsos teams around the world.
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What Worries the World – June 2020
The world is now split on whether coronavirus or unemployment is the most worrying issue facing their country today.
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What Worries the World - May 2020
The coronavirus pandemic continues to be the world’s greatest worry, but it is giving way to greater concern about unemployment in some countries.
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Coronavirus dominates global worries
COVID-19 overtakes all other issues in Ipsos’ What Worries the World survey with the highest level of concern recorded for any category since the series began.
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A hard day’s work: global attitudes to gender equality in the workplace
Gender equality at work is still not achieved as nearly three in ten men (28%) around the world think it’s acceptable to tell jokes or stories of a sexual nature at work, according to a new global survey to mark International Women’s Day. By contrast, only 16% of women globally say such jokes or stories are acceptable.
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Global Trends 2020: Understanding Complexity
Global Trends 2020: Understanding Complexity provides a single-source dataset of over 200 questions Ipsos asked of people in 33 markets, on global opinions, attitudes and behaviours around brands, technology, society, consumerism and much more, and combines it with expert analysis by trend specialists.
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What Worries the World - January 2020
Poverty & social inequality continues to be the greatest concern worldwide. We start the year with 61% globally saying that things in their country are heading in the wrong direction, up four points on 12 months ago.
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Global Divide on Social Mobility
Ipsos' survey for the World Economic Forum shows widespread enthusiasm about the future in emerging markets contrasting with rampant pessimism in mature economies.
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Global predictions for 2020
65% worldwide believe 2019 was a bad year for their country and half of them considered it a bad year for their family and themselves. And most of our respondents’ predictions worldwide are not very optimistic yet 75% of people polled in 33 markets are confident 2020 will be a better year for them.
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Men less likely than women to need intelligence and hard work to get ahead, public say
New research to support the launch of King’s College London’s World Questions event series, which begins with Hillary Rodham Clinton and Julia Gillard on 13 November, reveals public perceptions of what helps or hinders women’s equality around the world.