Ipsos polling shows low confidence among the public that Boris Johnson and Downing Street staff followed the Covid rules appropriately during the pandemic.
In the Ipsos Global Trustworthiness Monitor, we again find that, despite popular belief, the world is not experiencing a ‘crisis of trust’. Furthermore, the monitor reveals that pharmaceuticals, banking companies, and governments are now seen as more trustworthy than they were three years ago.
Inflation is now the top global worry for the first time, with 26 out of 27 countries recording an increase in concern over the last month according to the latest Ipsos global What Worries The World? survey.
Ipsos' latest research for the Department for Education gathered evidence during COVID-19 on the use of childcare in November 2021, as well as on the perceived impact of COVID-19 on child development, use of free entitlements, and additional charges from childcare providers.
Two years into the unprecedented upheavals instigated by a global pandemic, it feels like a good moment to take stock and think about what we have learned during this dramatic period.
After two years of life under COVID – how does the public think their own lives and the UK have changed? Many of us say we are feeling lonelier, spending more time on our screens, sleeping worse, facing longer NHS waiting lists – and most don’t think it’s all over yet.