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Are you better off than your parents were? That depends on money
The No. 1 thing people feel worse off than their parents about is retirement.
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Global study explores how wrong people are about the causes of death in their country
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception study highlights public misperceptions across 32 countries about the proportion of people who die from diseases, violence, transport injuries and other causes.
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The Departure Lounge - public attitudes to death and dying in Great Britain
Death may be certain, but our attitudes towards it are changing. How might we want to die in the 2020s?
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Ipsos Update - February 2020
This month’s edition of Ipsos Update features the latest research and thinking from Ipsos around the world on gender, shopper behaviour, entertainment in India and young people.
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The evolution of shopper behaviour in 2020
In this changing world, retailers need to adapt to remain relevant and competitive.
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What Worries the World - January 2020
Poverty & social inequality continues to be the greatest concern worldwide. We start the year with 61% globally saying that things in their country are heading in the wrong direction, up four points on 12 months ago.
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One of the biggest questions of 2020: Will Trump be re-elected? Here’s what the world thinks
Most people globally say it’s unlikely Trump will win re-election – differing from U.S. polls.
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Disruptive technologies: How data is collected when you can’t get on the ground
Remote sensing – satellites, drones, social listening & AI – are changing the way we collect data.
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Global attitudes toward gender in 2020
Peru, Spain and Brazil scored as the least gendered countries. Russia was the most gendered, followed by Serbia and China.
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Millennials are against use of nuclear weapons in any circumstances
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) survey carried out by Ipsos in Switzerland asked 16,000 millennials in 16 countries on their views on war.