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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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Teen
What it means to be a teen is changing. So is the world youth live in. This issue explores how the beliefs, attitudes and behaviors of adolescents are evolving in an age of social media, climate change, and economic instability, and what these transformations mean for brands, media and institutions.
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[WEBINAR] What the Future: Teen
Are the kids alright? The milestones and institutions that define the line between adolescence and adulthood are shifting, and teen perspectives on everything from identity and relationships to employment and education in a state of flux. No cap, as the kids say.
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What Worries the World – November 2023: Worry over terrorism and military conflict between nations on the rise
Inflation has now been the top global concern in our What Worries the World survey for the last 20 months.
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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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Most Americans would be happy to receive investments as holiday gifts
A new Yahoo Finance/Ipsos survey finds that Americans want investments as holiday gifts as a way to save for the future and build wealth
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Half of Americans are saving more for a safety net
34% of Americans say that in the past six months they have postponed or skipped a big-ticket product purchase.
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Global Trends 2023: A new world disorder
74% agree that their government and public services will do too little to help people in the years ahead.