Search
-
Global attitudes to housing and house prices
The Ipsos Housing Monitor is a new 30-country study looking at how people perceive their own and their country’s housing situation, and the challenges facing both.
-
Positivity about how this year has gone highest since before the pandemic
The Ipsos Predictions Survey 2025 is a 33-country study which looks at people’s expectations and predictions for the year ahead.
-
Inflation rates may be falling, but people expect further price rises
Welcome to the seventh edition of the Ipsos Cost of Living Monitor, a 32-country survey which tracks how people around the world feel about their finances during the polycrisis.
-
Inflation rates may be falling, but people expect further price rises
In the seventh edition of the Ipsos Cost of Living Monitor we find, despite falling inflation rates, people are still feeling the pressure.
-
The State of Democracy 2024: Between discontent, deep democratic disparities and calls for reform
A new Ipsos survey offers an in-depth analysis of democratic perceptions in eight Western countries, highlighting significant disparities and a strong demand for systemic reform.
-
October 2024: Consumer confidence up in Asia and Latin America
Sentiment declines in Europe; the overall Ipsos Global Consumer Confidence Index remains flat
-
11th wave of the Future Risks Barometer: In a world in polycrisis, never has the feeling of vulnerability been so strong
Ipsos and AXA publish today the 11th wave of the Future risks report. Conducted among a sample of 19,000 people representative of the national populations within 15 countries in the world and +3,000 risk experts within 50 countries, this study measures and classifies the levels of fear but also the feeling of vulnerability in the face of 25 different life risks.
-
More than one in two feel their country needs to do more on its infrastructure needs
The 2024 Global Infrastructure Report from Ipsos and the Global Infrastructure Investor Association (GIIA).
-
September 2024: Consumer confidence largely up Latin American countries
In contrast, sentiment is more mixed in Europe