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Housing 2017
Where and how will we live in the future? If Millennials continue to struggle to afford a home, the impact will be felt from finance to consumer packaged goods to home furnishings. We explore how brands can respond and cities can create impactful real estate and housing policies.
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Housing
While the patterns of how and where we live have barely changed, Americans have new expectations for home. Read whether and how these shifts will stick, with Ipsos research to guide brands and retailers to help people get more out their homes.
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Vacation
What happens to the future of vacations if business travel shrinks for the long term? We play out how the changing dynamics of business travel, hotel stays, the points economy, and virtual technologies will shape our future getaways.
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Commuting
How workers commute in the future depends on how and when American workplaces reopen. Ipsos research points to two patterns likely to emerge: more traffic and an upheaval in our routines. What will hybrid work mean for our future commuting life?
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Are We Ready to Share Again?
Revisit our recorded webinar to hear new research exploring current and potentially future shared mobility trends.
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Who is most informed about COVID?
This week we investigate vaccine and COVID knowledge, schools and the pandemic, climate change, the Build Back Better bill, personal finances and gun ownership.
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Americans still aren’t comfortable riding with other people
People are getting more comfortable shopping and hanging out as the delta surge dissipates, but transit, ridesharing and planes still make them uncomfortable.
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Concern about COVID casts a shadow over holiday planning
Even as cases continue to fall following the Delta surge, concern about COVID colors everything from how optimistic Americans are about returning to their pre-COVID lives to what people are gifting their friends and family this holiday season.
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U.S. consumer confidence at its lowest level in 8 months
All indices are significantly down from last week
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Polling Ranked Choice Voting Elections
For the first time in its history, New York City voters cast their ballots in the June primaries using Ranked Choice Voting (RCV).