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81% APAC consumers feel it is possible for a brand to support good causes and make money at the same time
Corporations are responding to calls for fairness and support for key issues by making an effort to demonstrate their empathy.
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81% of APAC consumers feel that it is inevitable that we lose privacy in the future because of technological developments
While there is concern about loss of privacy, most feel it is inevitable. Still, businesses cannot take access to private data for granted.
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78% APAC consumers cannot imagine life without the internet
People need to be persuaded that new technologies will improve their lives rather an adopting them without question
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82% APAC consumers feel that we are heading for environment disaster unless we change our habits quickly
Climate change has become a visceral reality and people want collaborative leadership
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[PRESS RELEASE] - Inflation Monitor 2023
Malaysians are less pessimistic about their future, despite 1 in 5 Malaysians are facing financial difficulties, especially lower-income households.
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Ipsos Update – June 2023
Inflation, agriculture, eCommerce… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Half of the public across 29 countries think their country is in recession
A latest wave of the Ipsos Global Inflation Monitor finds in 26 of 29 countries more people think their country is in recession than think it is not. Almost two-thirds expect inflation will continue to rise over the next year, while one-third expect their disposable income to fall.
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Ipsos Update – May 2023
Generations, corporate purpose, climate change… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Data Dive: What’s worrying people around the world the most this spring? Cash, crime and corruption.
Worries related to money dominate the top five list as economic uncertainty rises and pandemic plummets.
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We need to talk about generations - Understanding generations
Marketing is overrun with stereotypes, hot takes and clichés. Some of the most enduring in the first two decades of this century centred on the post-1980 millennials, who were proclaimed as a new generation that would completely disrupt business.