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Top 5 worries for Thais in the first half of 2025
Income decline, job insecurity drive consumer caution, while "Cakeism" mindset persists
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What Worries the World – May 2025
Conducted monthly in 30 countries among 20,000 adults for over a decade, the Ipsos What Worries the World study offers an exceptional snapshot of world opinion on pressing global issues.
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What Worries the World – October 2024
Conducted monthly in 29 countries among 20,000 adults for over a decade, the Ipsos What Worries the World study offers an exceptional snapshot of world opinion on pressing global issues.
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More than one in two feel their country needs to do more on its infrastructure needs
The 2024 Global Infrastructure Report from Ipsos and the Global Infrastructure Investor Association (GIIA).
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Earth Day 2024: Thai Perspectives on Climate Change
Navigating Climate Change in Thailand: Balancing Action, Apathy, and Economic Concerns
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Views on ESG by Ipsos
A roundup of the latest Ipsos Views on ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance).
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57% globally think their country is not doing enough to meet its infrastructure needs
People continue to recognise infrastructure’s ‘double dividend’ but see substantial room for improvement.
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Earth Day 2023 – Is concern and focus slipping on climate change?
A new global Ipsos survey of 21,231 adults reveals that, on average across 29 countries, just under a third (31%) of people agree that their government has a clear plan in place for how government, businesses and people are going to work together to tackle climate change. Agreement has fallen since last year by an average of eight percentage points across the 26 countries surveyed both in 2022 and this year.
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Ipsos releases Global Trends 2023: A new world disorder
As 2023 opens, we’re entering a new world disorder filled with crises on multiple fronts. The largest Global Trends survey ever, from leading insights firm Ipsos, shows that, globally, 74% agree that their government and public services will do too little to help people in the years ahead.
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Climate change: a growing skepticism
Purchasing power is now the key priority on a global level. Despite the importance they attribute to the climate and extreme weather events, people are less inclined to become involved and are more dubious as to the human origins of the phenomenon.