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What Worries the World - July 2019
‘What Worries the World’? 58% believe their nation is on the wrong track – whilst concerns about unemployment continue to be a prominent worry.
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Populist and Nativist views still prevail
New Ipsos study shows populist and nativist sentiment growing in some countries while receding in others.
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Global consumer confidence remains unchanged at its highest level in 2019
Strongest gains in optimism observed in Argentina, Turkey, China, and France; Japan, Spain, India, and Sweden see significant drops.
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Happiness is receding across the world
New global Ipsos study confirms a long-term decline in the percentage of adults who consider themselves happy.
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2019 US Politics - 35% of Americans approve of his handling of corruption issues
Just 35 percent of Americans approve of how President Trump is handling Russia.
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Consumer confidence hits highest level since 2018 with jobs driving gains
Eleven out of 24 countries see a significant increase in confidence over the last three months.
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What worries you the most? Unemployment, but corruption, inequality closing the gap
Corruption, inequality overtook unemployment as the No.1 global worry in 2017: poll.
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Economic and social costs of violence against women and girls
New study examines the economic and social costs of violence against women and girls (VAWG) in Ghana, Pakistan and South Sudan.
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Promising signs of improvement emerge on UK high streets
Footfall on May Day bank holiday (6th May) helped contribute to the strong month with the number of shoppers up by +8.4% on levels last year.
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Global Consumer Confidence Index - June 2019
June 2019 sees the Ipsos Global Consumer Confidence Index at 49.6, up 0.3 against last month, at the same level it was three months ago, but down 0.8 of a point over the past year. Uptick in optimism in India, the U.S. and several European markets. Japan, Saudi Arabia and Australia show signs of slowdown. Latin America and South Africa still in a slump.