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Half of small businesses remain concerned with inflation, report worker shortage
The quarterly Ipsos/MetLife/U.S. Chamber of Commerce Small Business Index in Q4 2023 falls, returns to levels from late 2022 and early 2023
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36% of the world’s population still dispute the human origins of climate change
The EDF today presents the findings of an opinion study conducted in 29 countries, covering two-thirds of the world’s population, and including the biggest CO2 emitters.
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Heading into a presidential election year, satisfaction with democracy is low
New Ipsos KnowledgePanel: The State of Democracy analyzes views on democracy across Croatia, France, Italy, Poland, Sweden, the UK, and the U.S.
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[WEBINAR] The Inside Track: 2024 Election Briefing
Join the Ipsos polling team for our regular briefing on the data and trends transforming the country.
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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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Data Dive: Gen Z women are struggling the most with stress, mental health issues
In five points, we break down how people around the world are dealing (or not) as the pandemic fades away, war grinds on and sticky inflation sticks around.
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Why gaming culture needs to evolve for everyone
A half-century on from the earliest arcades, gaming is less a subculture than a mass culture. But many young people also see the need to change that culture, says Ipsos’ Chris Hoffman.
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How AI will globalize the creator economy
Artificial intelligence will supercharge youth creativity and forge new relationships in an increasingly interconnected world, says YouTube’s Kaley Mullin.
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How to fill gaps in teen mental health and social media research
Growing up has never been easy — but the digital age makes it more complicated. Barb Solish, national director in the Office of Innovation at NAMI, thinks that when it comes to teen mental health, research is needed to get the full picture.