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What Worries the World - October 2020
More than 6 in 10 globally say things in their country are on the wrong track as Coronavirus continues to be the world’s greatest worry.
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‘Infrastructure part of the solution’; new global survey shows strong public backing for investment to aid recovery
Around the world, 79% of people believe that investment in infrastructure will create new jobs and boost their countries’ economies in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic according to a recent survey.
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Germany retains top “Nation Brand” ranking, the UK emerges ahead of Canada to round out the top three
The United Kingdom moves to second place, its best performance ever recorded, with reputational gains on the Governance, Culture, People, and Tourism Indices. Canada ranks in third place for a second consecutive year. There are major ranking slips in the top-10 with France’s ranking declining by three positions from second place in 2019 to fifth place in 2020, and the United States’ ranking dropping from sixth place last year to 10th this year.
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Widening the cracks: A spotlight on Italy during the pandemic
COVID-19 has exacerbated gender gaps which existed before the crisis.
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Global consumer sentiment still reviving slowly
More countries show gains than losses in economic confidence, but none has recovered to pre-pandemic levels – except China.
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Job loss is a concern for half of workers across the world
Job insecurity and ability to the learn essential new skills on the job vary widely across countries.
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World Luxury Tracking: Between new constraints & new expectations
Between new constraints & new expectations... A luxury that is reinvented, more aspirational than ever before. Ipsos unveils the results of its annual barometer of luxury consumption trends, the World Luxury Tracking (WLT) study.
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Global majority seeks trustworthy news but may be vulnerable to disinformation
Ipsos research for the Trust Project finds limited appetite to pay for news and more confidence in one’s own acumen about the reliability of sources than in other people’s.
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The state of happiness in a COVID world
Global Happiness 2020 survey shows happiness has receded in many, but not all countries since last year.