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Ipsos Update - May 2021
Climate change, vacations and vaccine passports, President Biden’s first 100 days and the latest trends in South Korean society are some of the featured topics in this month’s round-up of research and thinking from Ipsos around the world.
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Global public backs COVID-19 vaccine passports for international travel
Survey finds mixed views about mandating vaccine certificates for everyday activities
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What is the plan to tackle climate change?
Only 31% of online citizens agree that their country’s government has a clear plan in place for how government, businesses and people themselves are going to work together to tackle climate change
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Almost half of South African households go hungry due to Covid-19
One of the most devastating “unintended consequences” of the response to the Covid-19 pandemic in South Africa is the spread of hunger.
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Global consumer confidence reaches new pandemic high
Significant month-on-month gains in consumer sentiment recorded in seven markets
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Ipsos Perils of Perception: climate change
Around the world people say they understand what actions they need to take to combat climate change, but do they really?
The latest Perils of Perception study by Ipsos looks at how the general public in 30 markets around the world perceive environmental action. We ask them what they might do in their own lives to tackle climate change, and compare the answers to the (sometimes confusing) scientific truth -
Expectations about when life will return to pre-COVID normal vary widely across the world
Almost half of adults say their mental health has worsened during the pandemic, but nearly one quarter say it improved since the beginning of 2021
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Ipsos Update – April 2021
Our monthly round-up of research and analysis from Ipsos teams around the world covers a range of topics from gender equality and parenting to retail trends and how advertising becomes famous.
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Flirtation or commitment: Assessing post-pandemic stickiness of product subscriptions
Product subscriptions have gained a new relevance during the pandemic,but will this behaviour stick in a post COVID-19 world?
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Income and wealth disparities perceived as the most serious form of inequality
An online study by Ipsos, conducted across 28 countries in partnership with Kings College London’s Policy Institute has found that, when asked about a range of different inequalities, 60% said that inequalities in income and wealth are among the most serious types of inequality affecting their country.