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Positivity about how this year has gone highest since before the pandemic
The Ipsos Predictions Survey 2025 is a 33-country study which looks at people’s expectations and predictions for the year ahead.
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Inflation rates may be falling, but people expect further price rises
In the seventh edition of the Ipsos Cost of Living Monitor we find, despite falling inflation rates, people are still feeling the pressure.
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Attitudes to the 2024 Olympics
Ipsos has released the results of a 33-country survey investigating attitudes to the 2024 Paris Games. Interest is higher than it was for Tokyo, and 75% feel that the games will be an important opportunity for the world to come together.
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Global attitudes to crime and law enforcement
This 31-country study tracks how people around the world see crime playing out in their communities, what they want governments to do, and how much trust they have in law enforcement.
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What Worries the World – July 2024
Conducted monthly in 29 countries among a panel of over 20,000 adults for more than a decade, What Worries the World survey offers an exceptional snapshot of world opinion on pressing global issues.
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Global Happiness 2024
The new edition of Ipsos’ Global Happiness report finds there’s been a slight dip in happiness year-on-year as economic and political clouds loom overhead.
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Millennials and Gen Z less in favour of gender equality than older generations
Ipsos’ annual International Women’s Day finds 60% of Gen Z men across 31 countries think women’s equality discriminates against men.
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February 2024: Consumer confidence down among G7 countries
Sentiment largely up in the Asia-Pacific, while it is mixed throughout Europe.
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Global predictions for 2024: Optimism is on the rise as more think next year will be better
However, people expect climate change to worsen in 2024, the Ipsos Predictions survey finds
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People still feeling the pinch, fed up with ‘shrinkflation’ as 2023 wraps up
The latest wave of the Ipsos Global Inflation Monitor finds people across 33 countries will have more money to spend in the next year as red-hot prices cool off slightly in many places; and almost half of the global public are seeing red over products getting smaller but prices staying the same.