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October 2023: Consumer confidence declines sharply across Southeast Asia
Sentiment is down in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia.
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World Mental Health Day: 39% say they have had to take time off work due to stress in the past year
58% globally think about their mental wellbeing often.
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Mental health is now the number one health problem, ahead of cancer and coronavirus
48% across 31 countries say the quality of the healthcare in their country is good – but the picture is inconsistent.
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Ipsos Update – September 2023
Barbiecore, artificial intelligence, ESG… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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July 2023: Consumer confidence declines sharply among many European countries
Sentiment is significantly down in Great Britain, France, Hungary, and the Netherlands.
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Doing well by doing good: resilience, risk and the reputation value of ESG
ESG creates opportunity, in particular, it helps to drive innovation. Its ‘sustainability lens’ forces businesses to think critically about the long-term value they create, and to identify new trends, business opportunities and partnerships. More broadly, ESG is an increasingly powerful tool to strengthen corporate reputations.
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Chief Value Creator?: The changing role of the Chief Sustainability Officer (CSO)
Here we explore the changing role of the CSO and what this tells us about how organisations are responding to the challenges of ESG and sustainability.
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Navigating Social Issues: When and how to speak out
Five pieces of actionable guidance for corporate leaders as they determine what to speak out on and how, with a focus on maximizing opportunity and limiting risk.
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Ipsos Update – July 2023
Generative AI, equality, refugees… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Global perspectives on inequality: What does it mean, who are we worried about, and how much do we care?
Around the world, inequality is a more salient issue for younger generations, who are also less likely than older people to believe they live in a society that rewards merit and hard work. But there are some important differences between different groups in how inequality is defined, and who is thought to suffer because of it.