Search
-
Know the New America & Beyond: June 2025
Read a monthly dispatch of Ipsos' best insights on the U.S. tailored for the world.
-
Ipsos Transatlantic Pulse: Europeans more likely than Americans to say companies should help solve societal problems
Attitudes about corporate ESG, DEI programs diverge and converge across regional and generational lines.
-
55% of Europeans fear that the energy transition will further fragment society
An exclusive survey by Ipsos and BNP Paribas has taken the pulse of Europeans with regard to the transition and the resulting inequalities. Between urgency and fear, it is more than ever time to take the right path.
-
World Mental Health Day 2020
In recent years, the issue of mental health has risen up government and corporate agendas alike, reflecting the growing acknowledgement that mental health issues require the same level of understanding, treatment and advocacy as physical illness – and that we are all vulnerable. While there is still ground to conquer here, this momentum is gathering speed.
-
Study shows COVID-19 caused worst year in a decade for marketing agencies
Only 28% of marketers reported an increased reliance on their agencies in 2020, down from 50% the year before in Canada.
-
London ranks as the top “City Brand.” Sydney emerges in second place, while Paris declines from first in 2017 to third in 2020
London is the world’s top “City Brand”, with Sydney, Paris, New York, and Rome rounding out the top five, according to the people in ten countries surveyed for the Anholt-Ipsos City Brands Index.
-
Global consumer confidence is declining
Turkey, France, India, China Show Largest Drops; Brazil, Saudi Arabia Largest Increases. More Countries See Decreases than Gains in Jobs, Expectations and Investment Indices.
-
Global Consumer Confidence Holds Steady at 49.9 in November
Swedish consumer confidence falls below 60 for the first time in nearly two years. Saudi Arabia regains a value over 60 for the first time in more than two years.
-
South Africa - Economic Difficulties and a Small Ray of Hope
Three in every ten adult South Africans believe things will take a turn for the better in the next year, while just over half believe that things will be about the same and a further two in every ten think that their families will be worse off in a year's time.
-
Global Perception of US Presidential Election
Most citizens around the world believe Hillary Clinton will win the upcoming U.S. presidential election, though Donald Trump is seen as the favorite by the people of a few countries. Clinton leads by very large margins in Latin American countries, while Eastern Europe shows higher support for Trump.