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Republican debate watchers see Ramaswamy as the worst performer for the second consecutive debate
The 538/Washington Post/Ipsos post-debate poll also finds that nearly three in four likely Republican primary voters skipped watching the debate
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The US in 2023: Economy, AI, Politics
Here are the three major developments that dominated the conversations in board rooms and living rooms in the U.S. in 2023.
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How teens are taking charge to improve their gloomy futures
As a plaintiff in Held v. State of Montana, Eva Lighthiser sued her home state for not protecting residents from climate change. Here’s how she views the global fight for a greener future.
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How a new mindset is taking shape among young startups
Newlab’s Justin Massa explains how unpredictable forces like artificial intelligence and climate change are shaping teen perspectives on entrepreneurship, employment, and everything in between.
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Teens aren’t what you think anymore. Here’s why you need a new playbook
Today’s teens are coming of age in a fast-changing world, and they’re doing it differently than teens of the past. What the Future editor Matt Carmichael discusses the life stage shifts, anxieties and hopes that will define the teenage years in the decades to come.
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For COP28, here is what you need to know about public opinion on climate change
Below are five charts on the worsening climate disaster, where the American public stands on climate change, and how missing COP28 might affect Biden’s reputability on the environment
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Ipsos Update – December 2023
Risks, nations, AI… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Most Americans say Congress should highly prioritize funding mental health programs
Vast majority agree mental health is just as important as physical health
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How financial services providers can help customers deal with inflation
While banks cannot influence policies to impact inflation, they can show empathy and help alleviate customer economic anxiety by launching new products and services to help them cope, and ultimately deepen trust and win new customers.
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People still feeling the pinch, fed up with ‘shrinkflation’ as 2023 wraps up
The latest wave of the Ipsos Global Inflation Monitor finds people across 33 countries will have more money to spend in the next year as red-hot prices cool off slightly in many places; and almost half of the global public are seeing red over products getting smaller but prices staying the same.