Search
-
Americans Strongly Support Direct Cash Payments, Loan Repayment Freeze Amidst Coronavirus Outbreak
New Newsy/Ipsos poll shows a call for federal government to take drastic economic, safety measures as more Americans are staying home, watching the news & facing money loss
-
Public divided on whether isolation, travel bans prevent COVID-19 spread; border closures become more acceptable
Coronavirus crisis seen as threatening to both health and finances.
-
While Waiting for the Official Figures, Significant Increase in American Conversation about Job Loss
Early signals from social media tracking and public polling does not portend good news on jobs.
-
[WEBINAR] COVID-19 Healthcare Impact: Biosurveillance Atlas
The pandemic involving COVID-19 continues to mature and making educated and real-time decisions in an evolving crisis requires access to and use of disparate information sources and applying advanced research methods to better understand the public's reaction to the crisis.
-
The Uncertainty of Our New Normal: A Data Dump
What Ipsos research can tell us about our new reality
-
What Will the Coronavirus Economy Look Like in the U.S.?
Consumer confidence is a lagging indicator of economic crisis, but other countries can offer a roadmap of what’s to come for the U.S.
-
Reuters/Ipsos Core Political Survey: Presidential Approval Tracker (03/18/2020)
Trump’s overall approval is unchanged; Americans are beginning to change their behavior as coronavirus spreads
-
How News About Coronavirus Disruptions Is Spreading on Social Media
Where Americans are talking the most about empty grocery stores shelves and closed restaurants and bars.
-
Signals: Understanding the coronavirus crisis
This digest brings together our latest research on coronavirus and draws on our surveys, social media monitoring and analysis from our Ipsos teams around the world.
-
Coronavirus outbreak: What do cuts to growth forecasts, interest rates and stock markets plunges mean?
Threat of a recession will result in large fiscal measures from governments, say economists.