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Ipsos CASH Index: Finds New Low At 61.5
Third Straight Drop In Twice-Monthly Study
Ipsos CASH Index Dropped By 25 Points Between May And November 2002, Now IT HAS Dropped Nearly 15 More Points After A Brief Plateau;
It's A Top-Down Consumer Recession, With Macro-Economic Worries But Not Consumer Experience With Spending, Investing Or Job Security Woes
Does That Presage A Big Consumer Bounce Once War Worries Clarify? -
Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: Memo to State of the Union Speechwriters: Americans Volunteer the Economy, War, Job Issues, Health Care, Education as Top Problems
Survey Asks Adults to Report in Their Own Words The Most Important Problem Facing the Country, and the Biggest Challenges Facing Their Own Families
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Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: Two-in-Three Voters Continue to Approve of Bush's Job Performance
In First Post-Election Cook Political Report/Ipsos-Reid Survey, Strong Approval of Bush Performance Overall. On Bush Approval, the Marriage Gap Matters Most. On Direction of the Country, the Familiar Gender Gap Reappears.
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On the 10th Anniversary of NAFTA . . .
More Americans (48%) Believe They're NAFTA Winners, Compared to Canadians (38%), Mexicans (30%)
However, Canadians (44%) Most Likely To Want Closer Trade and Economic Ties with NAFTA Partners, While Americans (39%) Most Likely to Want Status Quo . . .
And Mexicans (33%) Most Likely to Want Less Trade, Economic Ties -
Ipsos-Reid CASH Index: Below 90 For Fifth Straight Month, In Sharp Contrast to Optimism of First Half of Year
CASH Index Fell Below 90 in June and Has Never Recovered;
Was Near or Above 100 Most of the First Five Months of 2002 -
Technologies With Clear Benefits Will Win This Holiday Season
Faced With A Glut Of Technology Offerings, Budget-Conscious Consumers Will Turn To Smaller-Ticket Products They Understand, Suggests Ipsos-Reid Survey
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Ipsos-Reid CASH Index: Remains Low, At 74.9, But Change Since QII Suggests Poor Consumer Attitudes May Not Translate Directly Into A Poor Holiday Shopping Season
But In The Longer-Range, Continued Low Scores On Job Prospects May Indicate Consumers Assume A Continued Slow Economy In Early 2003
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Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: The Do-It-Yourself Election
Democrats Fail to Turn Economic Distress into Votes for a New Economic Policy; Republicans Fail to Turn Bush Job Scores into Preference for Republican Congress; Parties Leave Voters to Figure It Out for Themselves