Search
-
Data Dive: How people feel about climate change and what to do about it
In five infographics, we break down what Ipsos’ global polling reveals about citizens’ views on the ‘climate emergency’, who is responsible and actions to take now.
-
The Hong Kong New Normal Tracking Study - Thought Leadership Wave 22
Ipsos has been following Hong Kong residents’ reactions to the pandemic since march 2020. Through our New Normal survey we have observed the ups and downs of the people in the territory and analysed the implications for businesses and brand owners.
-
Taking steps towards sustainable travel
Global Ipsos polling finds many people are open to becoming more sustainable tourists.
-
Vacation inflation: Red-hot prices cooling excitement for travel
But, the pleasure of taking a trip looks to be outweighing the pain of higher prices … for now.
-
A resumption of all habits, but not for everyone
Hong Kong residents are reverting to previous behaviours.
-
Money does not buy you happiness but it gets you close to it
The Hong Kong New Normal Tracking Study measures changes in attitudes and behaviour in reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic since March 2020. Highlights from June 2022 wave:
-
Ipsos Update - June 2022
Inflation is a recurring theme in the articles featured this month. Other topics include the future of food, the role of cycling and how EU citizens view the EU’s response to war in Ukraine. We also feature our latest Ipsos Views on AI-enabled Consumer Intelligence and tech-enabled product innovations.
-
A quarter are struggling financially and public expectations are for further inflation and price rises over 2022
A new 11-country Ipsos survey with the World Economic Forum reveals high levels of public economic pessimism in the face of a cost of living crisis.
-
Earth Day 2022: awareness of government actions to combat climate change is low in most countries despite high level of concern
In a new global survey of 23,577 adults aged 16 – 74 in 31 countries, Ipsos found that climate change is a regular concern for half of people across a global country average. Concern is notably higher in Latin American countries, with Colombia, Chile, Mexico, Argentina and Italy all leading the way as those who think about the effects of climate change on their countries most frequently. Conversely Great Britain ranks in the bottom five countries who don’t think about climate change as much, beaten only by Japan, the Netherlands, Russia and China.