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Countries that have a Younger Population are More Optimistic about 2018 than Countries with an Aging Population
The majority of adults are optimist about what the new year will bring, especially those in countries who have a lower median age, according to a recent online survey conducted by Ipsos in 28 different countries.
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Global Consumer Confidence Index Holds Steady
This month's global Consumer Confidence National Index score remained the same at 50.1.
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Flair India 2018: Aspiration to Action
In 2018, the Indian economy will be in fifth place worldwide, ahead of France and the UK. This dynamic, opening new balances of power, is part of a favourable trend for Asian countries that will be in the ranking of the ten largest economies in the next 15 years.
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87% of Indians are Optimistic for 2018
The latest Ipsos Global @dvisor poll was carried out in 28 countries around the world at the end of 2017. It asked over 21,500 online adults aged under 64 their predictions for 2018.
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Ipsos Update – January 2018
Happy New Year! Welcome to the first 2018 edition of Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world.
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The Economic Pulse of the World - December 2017
The average global economic assessment of national economies surveyed in 26 countries is down one point this wave with 46% of global citizens rating their national economies as ‘good’.
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Consumer Confidence National Index Down Slightly
This month’s global Consumer Confidence National Index score fell slightly from both October and November (each 50.5) to 50.1.
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Audience Measurement 5.0 - Pushing the Boundaries
We are entering the Fifth Age of Audience Measurement. It is an age where methodologies are being re-calibrated in response to a fast-changing media environment and where the quest for total understanding of audiences is higher than it has ever been. It is also an era where politics and economics are far greater barriers to progress than technical concerns.
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Perceptions Are Not Reality: Things are NOT as Bad as they Seem
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception survey highlights how wrong the online public across 38 countries are about key global issues and features of the population in their country.