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Internet Use Continues To Climb In Most Markets
Web Access Not Just Routine, But Essential, Ipsos-Reid Study Shows
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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 -
Americans Continue To Embrace Potential Of Digital Music
Ipsos-Reid's Quarterly Digital Music Study, TEMPO: Keeping Pace With Online Music Distribution, Finds Americans' Digital Music Appetite Remains Strong Throughout 2002
Over 100 Million Americans Have Listened To A Pre-recorded CD's On Their Computer, And Roughly 60 million Have Downloaded -
More Consumers Are Asking Their Doctors for Drug Samples - By Name
Ipsos PharmTrends Finds Patients Increasingly Savvy
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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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Continuing Growth
Revenues in the First Nine Months of 2002 up 12.2%
Organic Growth in the First Nine Months of 2002 : 7.8% -
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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Most Internet Users Will Be Online Shoppers This Holiday Season
Books and Videos Top the Shopping List, Followed by Music, Clothes, and Hardware/Software
Computer Hardware and Software will be on the Holiday List for 1-in-3 Online Shoppers
Almost No One Wants to Make a Gift of Cheap, Pirated Copies of the Real Thing -
Americans See Themselves As More Respectful Than They Were A Year Ago Toward Cultures With Different Values
A Majority of Americans Feel That Their Respect for Other Cultures Has Increased Over the Past Year, and Almost All Report Feeling Happier That They Live in the U.S.A. Ipsos-Reid World Monitor Poll Says