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Consumers in 13 European Countries Reject EU-Proposed Cap on Bank Fees
65% Say it Would Make Using Bank Cards Worse for Consumers; 82% Believe Retailers Would Increase Profits But Not Pass Savings On to Consumers
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Valentine's Day: Correlations Between Relationship Status and Happiness, Financial Situation
Respondents in 15 Countries Who are in a Relationship are More Likely to Say They are Happy (78%) Than Those Not (67%); They Are Also More Likely to Rate Their Current Financial Situation as Strong (29%) Than Those Not (21%)
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Taking Sides On Syria
While Majority (73%) of Global Respondents Blame Syrian Government for Current Conflict, No Such Clarity on Which Side Has Used Chemical Weapons Avails
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Optimism Abound on Cusp of 2013
Eight in Ten Global Respondents Expect 2013 Will Be a Better Year Than 2012, Up Eight Points Expectations of Next Year's Global Economy Also Jumps Eight Points to 49%
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Most (72%) Global Citizens Plan to Watch Olympics, Especially Track and Field (20%) and Soccer (20%)
Technology is Evolving How We Watch: 23% Will Watch Online, 10% On Their Mobile Phones or Tablets
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While Six in Ten (64%) Global Citizens Say They Need to Live Better, Most (81%) Wish They Had a Recipe To Do So
Seven in Ten (73%) Think Living Better Needs a Plan, Three in Ten (27%) Say Life Isn't Something You Can Plan
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Half (47%) of Global Employees Agree Their Workplace is Psychologically Safe and Healthy: Three in Ten (27%) Say Not
24 Country Survey of Workplaces finds Employees in United States (64%) and Canada (60%) Agree Most Employees in Argentina (44%), Mexico (43%), Hungary (42%) and Spain (38%) Most Likely to Disagree
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High Hopes for 2012: Seven in Ten (72%) Global Citizens Online Think It Will Be a Better Year Than 2011
But Only Four in Ten (41%) Agree Global Economy Will Be Stronger
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Sharp World Wide Drop in Support for Nuclear Energy as 26% of New Opponents Say Fukushima Drove Their Decision
In the wake of new nuclear power plant build rebukes in both Germany and Italy, a new poll conducted by international research company Ipsos for Reuters News finds that global support for Nuclear Energy has dropped quickly to 38% (down 16 points from 54%) to now become lower than support for coal (48%)--fuelled by a 26% jump in new opponents to nuclear power (above 50% in India, China, Japan and South Korea) who indicate that the recent crisis in Japan caused their decision. Download the entire Ipsos Global @dvisory now.
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Majority (76%) of Global Citizens Say US Justified in Killing Osama bin Laden
A new poll conducted by global research company Ipsos for Reuters News finds that three quarters (76%) of citizens in 22 countries say the United States was justified in seeking out and killing Osama bin Laden, founder of terrorist group al-Qaida. Download the entire Ipsos Global @dvisory now.