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What Worries the US – January 2018
Although Americans are more positive than the rest of the world, we are still mostly pessimistic: Results from the January 2018 Ipsos What Worries the World Study
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Parents in the U.S. Are Optimistic About Their Financial Situation for 2018, With Nearly Six in Ten Expecting it to Improve
Seven in Ten Say They Will Reduce Debt and/or Save More, While More Than Half Believe They Will Be in Better Financial Shape for Retirement
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Pessimism Grows in America While It Recedes Globally
In latest What Worries the World survey, the world worries most about unemployment, corruption, and poverty; Americans are most concerned about healthcare, terrorism and crime
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The Ipsos Affluent Intelligence Group Releases Fall 2017 Ipsos Affluent Survey
Survey Spotlights “Affluencers” – The Powerful New Target Group that Drive Purchases Across Categories
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Most Adults Across North America (the U.S., Mexico, and Canada) Say That They Have Watched the World Cup in the Past
Viewership in Mexico is Especially High, As Is Interest in the Sport of Soccer/Football in General
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Americans Both Optimistic and Concerned about Automation
Confident as Consumers, but Worried as Workers
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Perceptions in America: Puerto Rico & Disaster Relief Response
Ipsos poll on Puerto Rico and the Hurricane Disaster Relief Response
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Money Under 35
Navient’s 2017 national study on financial health of young adults between the ages of 22 and 35
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Mondelēz International publishes Ipsos’ first outcome assessment for Cocoa Life in Indonesia
The report demonstrates how Cocoa Life is progressing in its ambition to improve livelihoods among cocoa farmers and communities in the third largest cocoa-producing country in the world.
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Millennials Rate Having a Steady Job and Buying a Home as the Most Significant Milestones Associated with Becoming a Financially Mature Adult
Millennial Women Significantly More Likely to Say They Have Already Reached Most Milestones Listed, Including Having a Steady Job/Income