Search
-
Ipsos Update - June 2020
This month’s round-up of research and analysis from Ipsos around the world includes the latest insights on the impacts of coronavirus and how we can plan for the future, customer experience – including the emerging health and safety agenda, attitudes to work, the second world war, and public opinion from New Zealand and Australia.
-
Global consumer confidence at its lowest in years
Consumer sentiment has declined sharply in almost every country.
-
Job losses stack up: COVID-19 to hit hourly workers, smaller businesses hardest, say experts
More than half of people in a global poll feel a ‘high threat’ to their job from the pandemic.
-
Ipsos Tracks MENA Consumer Sentiment in Light of the COVID-19 Outbreak
What are the changing consumer habits with the COVID-19 Pandemic spreading?
-
March 2020: Consumer confidence still holding up globally, but expectations are down
Two months after the first coronavirus outbreak reports, China loses its status of consumer sentiment champion to Saudi Arabia while Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico and the United States see a notable drop in their expectations Index since February.
-
Coronavirus outbreak: What do cuts to growth forecasts, interest rates and stock markets plunges mean?
Threat of a recession will result in large fiscal measures from governments, say economists.
-
Signals: Understanding the coronavirus crisis
This digest brings together our latest research on coronavirus and draws on our surveys, social media monitoring and analysis from our Ipsos teams around the world.
-
Consumer sentiment drops in China, but not in other major economies
Global consumer confidence index has barely changed since the COVID-19 virus outbreak, but China’s national index is down by more than four points.
-
Corporate Reputation: The key questions answered
How to unlock the value of reputation for businesses.
-
Only one third of workers expect their job to be automated
Ipsos' survey for the World Economic Forum finds most employed adults across the world trust they have the skills needed to weather automation.