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The Future of Work
Six in Ten Employed Adults Across 7-Countries Report Being Satisfied With Their Current Job. Job Satisfaction and Work Space are Connected.
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Confidence in Theresa May to get a good Brexit deal falls
The Ipsos February 2019 Political Monitor shows that trust in Theresa May to make the right decisions on Brexit has fallen.
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Global predictions for 2019
Global predictions for the world economy are less optimistic than in 2018
• Many countries also expect public unrest in the coming year
• After a hot 2018, most expect global temperatures to continue to rise
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Reuters/Ipsos Data: Core Political (01/30/2019)
Pessimism about the direction of the country continues to grow despite the reopening of the government this week.
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As 2019 kicks in, consumer confidence soars in Brazil and Mexico while dipping in China, Turkey and France
Month-over-Month Uptick Too Small to Buck a Downward Trend
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First Global Affluent Study Data Set
Survey Spotlights “Global Affluencers” – First to try. First to buy. The Powerful Global Target Group Driving Purchases and Early Adoption Across Category.
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Ipsos Update - January 2019
The first Ipsos Update of 2019 highlights recent reports on people’s (mis)perceptions of reality, global security and food. It also features new white papers on trust in media, human curation in an AI world and how technology is disrupting the customer experience.
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UN Women reports: Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq
Ipsos and UN Women report on Gender and Displacement caused by the Syria crisis.
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Our misperceptions about crime and violence, sex, climate change, the economy and other key issues
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception study shows which key facts the online public across 37 countries get right about their society – and which they get wrong. Now in its fifth year, the survey aims to highlight how we’re wired to think in certain ways and how our environment influences our (mis)perceptions.
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New global study: Today’s views that will shape tomorrow’s food
Around the globe, people are more likely to think that their access to healthy and quality food will increase in the future, but that it will come at a price, according to a new Global Advisor survey from Ipsos. Those surveyed are more than twice as likely to say that the costs of food will get worse in the future than believe it will improve.