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How younger Americans use credit cards to make ends meet
What the Ipsos Consumer Tracker reveals about how credit utilization varies by generation — and how it fits into the broader economic picture
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Why panel-member first is good for research and business
The KnowledgePanel employs a highly effective approach to online probability research that emphasizes the experience and life cycle of panel members, something we call the Panel-Member First Approach.
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A majority of Americans value their credit card rewards
Nearly three in four Americans say they have a credit card that gives them rewards, and two in three people with a rewards card prefer to use it because of the points it earns, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
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More say they can save money as mixed bag of economic opinions continues
The number of Americans who say they're struggling economically is going down, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker, but it’s still arguably not great that a sizable part of the population can’t splurge on a nice-to-have after paying their need-to-have bills.
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A new benchmark in our perception of COVID’s waning threat
One in three Americans now say they believe COVID is a very low risk to them, personally, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker. Two years ago, only 10% of Americans said the same.
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Why Americans think streaming TV is only getting better
49% of Americans agree that the quality of content available to them on streaming platforms has improved in the past year, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker.
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Strong generational differences emerge in our news consumption
Nearly half of Americans still tune into one of the three legacy TV networks (ABC/NBC/CBS) regularly for news, but networks just edge social media as a regular news source, according to new polling from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker.
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Men are more confident in their ability to spot fake news or AI content
Men are quite confident (72%) in their ability to tell real news from fake news than women (59%), according to new polling from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker. We see a similar gender gap when it comes to our perceived ability to tell content that was created by AI.
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Shifts: AI, globalization and social media
From automation to globalization, systemic shifts can create new risks. Ipsos Strategy3’s Trevor Sudano looks at three of these macro-level causes and effects.
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An economic meltdown is the doomsday Americans fear the most. Here’s why
One in five list climate change as the catastrophe they are most worried about, according to new polling from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker. One in four pick World War III. Fully a third say a total economic collapse in the U.S. is what keeps them up at night.