Public opinion


Public Health Survey

Public Opinion on the Covid-19 outbreak

In an uncertain world, data matters. Ipsos experts share the latest research and analysis related to the coronavirus pandemic, based on a multi-country poll.
Public Health Survey

More suffering from under exercising, anxiety than other health concerns due to COVID-19: Poll

Under exercising, anxiety, overeating top the list with women more likely to say they are impacted.
Public Health Survey

More people want to return to work but uncomfortable with kids returning to school amid COVID-19

Majority in 9 out of 16 countries comfortable with returning to workplace but only two countries comfortable with kids back at school.
Employment Survey

How old is too old to work? Depends where you live and how you view, experience ageism

The average age up until when a person is considered employable across 28 countries is 49.
Government Survey

View of government’s job to contain COVID-19 falls in hard hit countries, rises in others

People in Japan, hard-hit countries of Spain, France are unhappy with government response.
Public Health Survey

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.
Public Health Survey

COVID-19 MENA Consumer Sentiment Tracker

A report on understanding attitudes, behaviors and future expectations in KSA, UAE, Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, and Lebanon.

58,4% of Jordanians think that the country is heading in the wrong direction

The last quarter of 2018 has witnessed a continuation of the economic unrest sweeping the kingdom.

Top 3 Concerns For Jordanians: Unemployment, Inflation, Poverty & Social Inequality

In June 2018, Jordanians took to the streets in angry anti-austerity protests that clearly rejected the newly proposed government tax legislation. As the protests boiled, a new government was appointed bringing about high hopes of prosperity and better economic reforms. With that, the public’s anger subsided in anticipation of a better economic future.