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Ipsos Update – December 2023
Risks, nations, AI… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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People still feeling the pinch, fed up with ‘shrinkflation’ as 2023 wraps up
The latest wave of the Ipsos Global Inflation Monitor finds people across 33 countries will have more money to spend in the next year as red-hot prices cool off slightly in many places; and almost half of the global public are seeing red over products getting smaller but prices staying the same.
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Consumer confidence in Poland returns near pre-pandemic levels
How and why Polish consumers are growing more confident in the economy
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Seven in ten people anticipate climate change will have a “severe effect” in their area within the next ten years
And six in ten say their government is not working hard enough to tackle climate change.
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Mastering complexity: The path towards a cancer-free reality
This is the third and final paper in a series which began eight years ago, focusing on unravelling – and ultimately overcoming – the sheer complexity of cancer, one of humanity’s oldest and most formidable foes.
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Monitoring the obesity treatment revolution, in healthcare and beyond
Ipsos has launched three new syndicated studies to monitor and anticipate changes in the rapidly evolving landscape of obesity treatment.
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[ Webinar ] KEYS - The year in review: Opportunities in the Polycrisis
Watch the latest instalment of the Keys Webinar
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What Worries the World – November 2023: Worry over terrorism and military conflict between nations on the rise
Inflation has now been the top global concern in our What Worries the World survey for the last 20 months.
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Ipsos releases an update to Global Trends 2023: Polarisation, Pessimism and Positivity
We are releasing this report ahead of COP28 and have found that attitudes towards purpose are declining for the first time in a decade. People are focusing more inwardly on themselves and their world, rather than the broader problems surrounding them.
The polycrisis, which includes political uncertainty, climate change, and war to name just a few, has arguably worsened, leading to a lower priority on environmental concern and brand/value alignment among citizens in many countries. Our end of year update reflects this sentiment, and in the increasing sense of pessimism we felt as we wrote this report. -
Global citizens achieve near consensus: The world is becoming more dangerous
Ipsos survey for Halifax International Security Forum finds 70% of people, on average, across 30 countries expect in the next 25 years we could see another world conflict involving superpowers similar to World Wars I & II