The latest Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index finds British consumers feeling a little better about the state of the economy than they did 12 months ago.
Some 19% now say the economy is in “good shape”, which represents a marked improvement on a year ago. In June 2012, only 12% gave the British economy a “good” rating.
Ipsos Global Advisor 43: The economic pulse of the world April 2013Ipsos UK
After a week which saw the IMF expressing concern about the state of the UK economy, a new global poll released today by Ipsos MORI finds British consumers in gloomy mood.
Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index: August 2013Ipsos UK
The latest Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index provides further evidence that British consumers are becoming more optimistic about the state of the economy.
Some 23% now say the British economy is in “good” shape, up 4 points on June and more than double the level of twelve months ago (when the figure stood at 11%).
This pattern is not evident in all European countries. As the table below shows, in France, Italy and Spain, consumers are just as downbeat now in their assessments as they were a year ago.
Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index April 2013Ipsos UK
Ipsos’ monthly 24-country survey finds just 13% of Britons saying their economy is in “good” shape, little changed from the 12% recorded last month and indeed unchanged on a year ago (also 12%).
This month has seen Ipsos MORI’s Economic Optimism Index reach record levels (LINK), with 53% of Britons now expecting to see an improvement in the economy over the next 12 months.
This turnaround in economic confidence is underlined by the latest findings from the Ipsos Economic Pulse – a monthly tracker of the global mood, running in 25 countries.
In April 2013, just 13% of the British public said the economy was in “good shape”. Now that figure stands at 37%.
Global @dvisor economic pulse of the world march 2018Robert Grimm Ph.D
The document provides survey results from 28 countries assessing citizens' views of their national and local economies. Globally, 47% of citizens rated their country's economic situation as good, down 1 point. China had the highest rating at 88%, while Brazil had the lowest at 11%. Regarding the local economy, 35% of citizens rated it as good, also down 1 point. The outlook for the local economy in 6 months was unchanged at 30%. India had the most positive and Belgium the most negative outlook.
Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index: UK economic confidence returns to pre-crash ...Ipsos UK
Britons are now more positive about the state of the UK than at any time since the crash, according to the latest Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index, conducted in 25 countries across the globe.
Ipsos Global Advisor 43: The economic pulse of the world April 2013Ipsos UK
After a week which saw the IMF expressing concern about the state of the UK economy, a new global poll released today by Ipsos MORI finds British consumers in gloomy mood.
Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index: August 2013Ipsos UK
The latest Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index provides further evidence that British consumers are becoming more optimistic about the state of the economy.
Some 23% now say the British economy is in “good” shape, up 4 points on June and more than double the level of twelve months ago (when the figure stood at 11%).
This pattern is not evident in all European countries. As the table below shows, in France, Italy and Spain, consumers are just as downbeat now in their assessments as they were a year ago.
Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index April 2013Ipsos UK
Ipsos’ monthly 24-country survey finds just 13% of Britons saying their economy is in “good” shape, little changed from the 12% recorded last month and indeed unchanged on a year ago (also 12%).
This month has seen Ipsos MORI’s Economic Optimism Index reach record levels (LINK), with 53% of Britons now expecting to see an improvement in the economy over the next 12 months.
This turnaround in economic confidence is underlined by the latest findings from the Ipsos Economic Pulse – a monthly tracker of the global mood, running in 25 countries.
In April 2013, just 13% of the British public said the economy was in “good shape”. Now that figure stands at 37%.
Global @dvisor economic pulse of the world march 2018Robert Grimm Ph.D
The document provides survey results from 28 countries assessing citizens' views of their national and local economies. Globally, 47% of citizens rated their country's economic situation as good, down 1 point. China had the highest rating at 88%, while Brazil had the lowest at 11%. Regarding the local economy, 35% of citizens rated it as good, also down 1 point. The outlook for the local economy in 6 months was unchanged at 30%. India had the most positive and Belgium the most negative outlook.
Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index: UK economic confidence returns to pre-crash ...Ipsos UK
Britons are now more positive about the state of the UK than at any time since the crash, according to the latest Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index, conducted in 25 countries across the globe.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 19: The Economic Pulse of the World - April 2011Ipsos UK
Citizens in 24 Countries Assess the Current State of their Country’s Economy for a Total Global Perspective
These are the findings of the Global @dvisor Wave 19 (G@19), an Ipsos survey conducted between March 2nd and March 14th. Interviews were completed prior to the first earthquakes in Japan.
The survey instrument is conducted monthly in 24 countries around the world via the Ipsos Online Panel system. The countries reporting herein are Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Great Britain, Germany, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Turkey and the United States of America.
For the results of the survey presented herein, an international sample of 18,829 adults aged 18-64 in the US and Canada, and age 16-64 in all other countries, were interviewed. Approximately 1000+ individuals participated on a country by country basis via the Ipsos Online Panel with the exception of Argentina, Belgium, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Sweden and Turkey, where each have a sample approximately 500+.
Weighting was employed to balance demographics and ensure the sample's composition reflects that of the adult population according to the most recent country Census data available and to provide results intended to approximate the sample universe. A survey with an unweighted probability sample of this size and a 100% response rate would have an estimated margin of error of +/-3.1 percentage points for a sample of 1,000 and an estimated margin of error of +/- 4.5 percentage points for a sample of 500. 19 times out of 20 per country of what the results would have been had the entire population of adults in that country had been polled.
Final gemma personal financial capability survey 2 for presentationmfcsmalta
The survey collected responses from 405 people between May 29th and June 5th 2020 on household money management during the COVID-19 pandemic. Key findings include:
- Respondents felt more in control of their finances than in April, though those in Southern Harbour felt less in control.
- Planning expenditures and having emergency savings improved compared to April, especially for those aged 45-64.
- Respondents were more optimistic about their financial situation improving over the next 3 months compared to April.
- Major purchases were seen as more timely now compared to April, especially by younger respondents.
- Respondents intend to save more after the pandemic by spending less on discretionary items and delaying
Public Attitudes to Immigration - May 2017Ipsos UK
New polling by Ipsos MORI finds most Britons are pessimistic about Theresa May’s likelihood of success to hit her target to cut net migration to the “tens of thousands” in the next few years. Two in three (68%) say that it is either not at all likely or fairly unlikely that the Conservatives will be able to achieve this target while just 18% think that they will. Nevertheless, when it comes to deciding what a “sustainable” level of net migration should be only one in five (20%) think this is would be 100,000 or above (after being told that it currently stands at 273,000). Half (49%) think it should be 100,000 or less and 30% are unsure.
Nielsen q4-2015 global consumer confidence report digitalDuy, Vo Hoang
Global consumer confidence ended 2015 at the same level it began the year, with an index score of 97. While Europe saw improvements in confidence throughout 2015, other regions declined or remained flat by the end of the year. More than half of global respondents believed they were in recession in the fourth quarter. Concerns about terrorism and immigration increased significantly in the fourth quarter in North America and Europe, surpassing economic issues as a top concern in those regions.
This document summarizes the results of an Ipsos survey of over 13,000 employed adults across 28 countries regarding their views on jobs and automation. The key findings are:
- Globally, 35% think their job will be automated within 10 years, while 54% think it is unlikely and 11% are unsure. Workers in emerging markets are more likely to expect automation than advanced economies.
- Most workers (69%) are confident they have the skills needed for their job to continue, though confidence is lowest in Japan, South Korea, Eastern Europe and Southern Europe.
- Those who expect automation are more educated and in senior roles, and they also have higher confidence in their skills adapting to changes.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 37: The economic pulse of the world October 2012Ipsos UK
One in seven Britons (14%) believe the economy is in good shape compared to 68% of Germans according to new research released today by Ipsos MORI.
The Ipsos Global Advisor poll of 24 countries leaves Britain just ahead of Japan (11%), France (6%), Italy (6%) Hungary (4%) and Spain (4%) in the international league of economic gloom. The 14% of British adults that rate the economy as good is exactly the same as last month.
The document summarizes a report on global consumer confidence in the second quarter of 2014. Some key findings include:
- Global consumer confidence increased slightly to an index of 97, the highest since 2007, driven by gains in North America and parts of Europe.
- Optimism about job prospects reached 50% globally for the first time since 2007, though outlook varied regionally.
- Confidence increased in the US and Canada in North America and parts of Europe like Italy, but declined in Japan and some emerging markets.
- Executives in China are notably downbeat about current and future economic conditions in their home country, with more reporting conditions have worsened over the past six months and will continue to do so.
- Geopolitical instability remains a key risk cited by executives globally, especially in Europe, while concerns over potential sovereign debt defaults have increased since last year.
- While global economic prospects overall are seen as steady, executives in emerging markets are less optimistic than six months ago, though still more positive than developed markets.
Institute and Faculty of Actuaries Spring Lecture on Social Progress Indexsocprog
Michael Green, CEO of the Social Progress Imperative, presented about the Sustainable Development Goals, and specifically the importance of measuring development in order to drive progress. The Social Progress Imperative has produced scorecards grading countries according to their current progress on the SDGs, and in his lecture he will address the challenges and opportunities associated with using metrics in this way.
Post-Brexit, Europeans More Positive About the EU, But Want Own Referendum on...Pew Research Center
Bruce Stokes, director of global economic attitudes, presented Pew Research Center findings on European attitudes toward the European Union (EU) in Brussels, Paris, Warsaw, Berlin and London.
On 31 January 2017, Ipsos held a major debate where we dissected the momentous political events of 2016 and looked forward to key elections in 2017. Our high profile pollsters from around the world examined political discontent and uncertainty, the key forces that are driving it and where in the world it is most prevalent and why. The panel included experts on the political context and public opinion in Britain, France, Italy, the US, Canada and South Africa, providing a wide range of perspectives on the key political challenges of our time.
Asia Research Partners provides online survey panels for research across 13 countries in Asia. The document describes their survey panel for Taiwan, which has 163,000 respondents. It provides demographic information about the Taiwan panel such as gender, age, marital status, and geographic distribution, as well as economic and internet usage statistics for Taiwan.
Public Health England: Public awareness and opinion survey 2017Ipsos UK
This is the fourth wave of Public Health England's public opinion research, conducted by Ipsos MORI, following previous waves in 2016, 2015, and a baseline wave in 2014.
- The SKAGEN Global fund underperformed its benchmark index in November, rising 1.1% compared to the index's 2.4% gain. Weak Russian and oil-related stocks contributed to the underperformance.
- Year-to-date the fund has gained 7.2%, lagging the benchmark index by 10.4%.
- Samsung Electronics was the top positive contributor in November while Weatherford was the largest detractor.
- The fund managers continued reducing smaller positions and increasing the concentration of larger holdings in the top 10.
The document provides an overview of TransGraph Consulting Pvt Ltd, an Indian commodities and currencies forecasting firm. It summarizes TransGraph's services including price forecasting, risk management, value chain analysis and risk consulting software. It then discusses the global economic outlook, with the Euro strengthening against the US Dollar despite divergent monetary policies between the ECB and Fed. It also covers trends in the US, Eurozone, Japanese and Chinese economies and currencies. The document concludes with an outlook for the US Dollar index to find support above 87 and rise to 94.
Business Monitor Key Views on Asia's economic, political and infrastructure a...Wei Xiang Tay
This month we've done something a little different. The first half is the general macro outlook (global + regional), and the second half, a slightly deeper dive into the infra sector, looking at key markets within APAC. This monthly presentation has a great mix of economics, politics and sectors analysis.
About 28,8% of the South African population is aged younger than 15 years and approximately 9,0% (5,3 million) is 60 years or older. Of those younger than 15 years of age, the majority reside in Gauteng (21,5%) and KwaZulu- Natal (21,1%). Of the elderly (those aged 60 years and older), the highest percentage 23,9% (1,27 million) reside in Gauteng. The proportion of elderly persons aged 60 and older is increasing over time.
Download the full release here: http://www.statssa.gov.za/?page_id=1854&PPN=P0302&SCH=7668
The latest mid-year population estimates show that South Africa’s population is estimated at 56,5 million people.
We take a closer look at South Africa's population as well as the prevalence of HIV in the country.
http://www.statssa.gov.za/?p=10263
Beyond the Bubble: Labour Party Conference 2014Ipsos UK
Ipsos MORI hosted the successful fringe event Beyond the Bubble at the 2014 Labour Party conference. The event explored how the political parties are doing in our polls, using our long-term trend data, as well as new findings from our monthly Political Monitor and Issues Index.
The Rt Hon Margaret Hodge, Fabian Women’s Ellie Cumbo and The Guardian’s chief political correspondent, Andrew Sparrow formed the Labour panel.Head of Political Research Gideon Skinner presented the Ipsos MORI view. Ben Page chaired the event.
This document discusses declining trust in and attachment to political parties and institutions in the UK. It finds that younger generations feel less connected to political parties than older generations. Trust in politicians has declined long-term. Support for third parties like UKIP and the Greens is rising as the dominance of Labour and the Conservatives falls. The public is increasingly divided on issues like the structure of government and the welfare state. The document concludes that the 2015 UK general election may see no party winning an outright majority due to these trends in public opinion.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 19: The Economic Pulse of the World - April 2011Ipsos UK
Citizens in 24 Countries Assess the Current State of their Country’s Economy for a Total Global Perspective
These are the findings of the Global @dvisor Wave 19 (G@19), an Ipsos survey conducted between March 2nd and March 14th. Interviews were completed prior to the first earthquakes in Japan.
The survey instrument is conducted monthly in 24 countries around the world via the Ipsos Online Panel system. The countries reporting herein are Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Great Britain, Germany, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Turkey and the United States of America.
For the results of the survey presented herein, an international sample of 18,829 adults aged 18-64 in the US and Canada, and age 16-64 in all other countries, were interviewed. Approximately 1000+ individuals participated on a country by country basis via the Ipsos Online Panel with the exception of Argentina, Belgium, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Sweden and Turkey, where each have a sample approximately 500+.
Weighting was employed to balance demographics and ensure the sample's composition reflects that of the adult population according to the most recent country Census data available and to provide results intended to approximate the sample universe. A survey with an unweighted probability sample of this size and a 100% response rate would have an estimated margin of error of +/-3.1 percentage points for a sample of 1,000 and an estimated margin of error of +/- 4.5 percentage points for a sample of 500. 19 times out of 20 per country of what the results would have been had the entire population of adults in that country had been polled.
Final gemma personal financial capability survey 2 for presentationmfcsmalta
The survey collected responses from 405 people between May 29th and June 5th 2020 on household money management during the COVID-19 pandemic. Key findings include:
- Respondents felt more in control of their finances than in April, though those in Southern Harbour felt less in control.
- Planning expenditures and having emergency savings improved compared to April, especially for those aged 45-64.
- Respondents were more optimistic about their financial situation improving over the next 3 months compared to April.
- Major purchases were seen as more timely now compared to April, especially by younger respondents.
- Respondents intend to save more after the pandemic by spending less on discretionary items and delaying
Public Attitudes to Immigration - May 2017Ipsos UK
New polling by Ipsos MORI finds most Britons are pessimistic about Theresa May’s likelihood of success to hit her target to cut net migration to the “tens of thousands” in the next few years. Two in three (68%) say that it is either not at all likely or fairly unlikely that the Conservatives will be able to achieve this target while just 18% think that they will. Nevertheless, when it comes to deciding what a “sustainable” level of net migration should be only one in five (20%) think this is would be 100,000 or above (after being told that it currently stands at 273,000). Half (49%) think it should be 100,000 or less and 30% are unsure.
Nielsen q4-2015 global consumer confidence report digitalDuy, Vo Hoang
Global consumer confidence ended 2015 at the same level it began the year, with an index score of 97. While Europe saw improvements in confidence throughout 2015, other regions declined or remained flat by the end of the year. More than half of global respondents believed they were in recession in the fourth quarter. Concerns about terrorism and immigration increased significantly in the fourth quarter in North America and Europe, surpassing economic issues as a top concern in those regions.
This document summarizes the results of an Ipsos survey of over 13,000 employed adults across 28 countries regarding their views on jobs and automation. The key findings are:
- Globally, 35% think their job will be automated within 10 years, while 54% think it is unlikely and 11% are unsure. Workers in emerging markets are more likely to expect automation than advanced economies.
- Most workers (69%) are confident they have the skills needed for their job to continue, though confidence is lowest in Japan, South Korea, Eastern Europe and Southern Europe.
- Those who expect automation are more educated and in senior roles, and they also have higher confidence in their skills adapting to changes.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 37: The economic pulse of the world October 2012Ipsos UK
One in seven Britons (14%) believe the economy is in good shape compared to 68% of Germans according to new research released today by Ipsos MORI.
The Ipsos Global Advisor poll of 24 countries leaves Britain just ahead of Japan (11%), France (6%), Italy (6%) Hungary (4%) and Spain (4%) in the international league of economic gloom. The 14% of British adults that rate the economy as good is exactly the same as last month.
The document summarizes a report on global consumer confidence in the second quarter of 2014. Some key findings include:
- Global consumer confidence increased slightly to an index of 97, the highest since 2007, driven by gains in North America and parts of Europe.
- Optimism about job prospects reached 50% globally for the first time since 2007, though outlook varied regionally.
- Confidence increased in the US and Canada in North America and parts of Europe like Italy, but declined in Japan and some emerging markets.
- Executives in China are notably downbeat about current and future economic conditions in their home country, with more reporting conditions have worsened over the past six months and will continue to do so.
- Geopolitical instability remains a key risk cited by executives globally, especially in Europe, while concerns over potential sovereign debt defaults have increased since last year.
- While global economic prospects overall are seen as steady, executives in emerging markets are less optimistic than six months ago, though still more positive than developed markets.
Institute and Faculty of Actuaries Spring Lecture on Social Progress Indexsocprog
Michael Green, CEO of the Social Progress Imperative, presented about the Sustainable Development Goals, and specifically the importance of measuring development in order to drive progress. The Social Progress Imperative has produced scorecards grading countries according to their current progress on the SDGs, and in his lecture he will address the challenges and opportunities associated with using metrics in this way.
Post-Brexit, Europeans More Positive About the EU, But Want Own Referendum on...Pew Research Center
Bruce Stokes, director of global economic attitudes, presented Pew Research Center findings on European attitudes toward the European Union (EU) in Brussels, Paris, Warsaw, Berlin and London.
On 31 January 2017, Ipsos held a major debate where we dissected the momentous political events of 2016 and looked forward to key elections in 2017. Our high profile pollsters from around the world examined political discontent and uncertainty, the key forces that are driving it and where in the world it is most prevalent and why. The panel included experts on the political context and public opinion in Britain, France, Italy, the US, Canada and South Africa, providing a wide range of perspectives on the key political challenges of our time.
Asia Research Partners provides online survey panels for research across 13 countries in Asia. The document describes their survey panel for Taiwan, which has 163,000 respondents. It provides demographic information about the Taiwan panel such as gender, age, marital status, and geographic distribution, as well as economic and internet usage statistics for Taiwan.
Public Health England: Public awareness and opinion survey 2017Ipsos UK
This is the fourth wave of Public Health England's public opinion research, conducted by Ipsos MORI, following previous waves in 2016, 2015, and a baseline wave in 2014.
- The SKAGEN Global fund underperformed its benchmark index in November, rising 1.1% compared to the index's 2.4% gain. Weak Russian and oil-related stocks contributed to the underperformance.
- Year-to-date the fund has gained 7.2%, lagging the benchmark index by 10.4%.
- Samsung Electronics was the top positive contributor in November while Weatherford was the largest detractor.
- The fund managers continued reducing smaller positions and increasing the concentration of larger holdings in the top 10.
The document provides an overview of TransGraph Consulting Pvt Ltd, an Indian commodities and currencies forecasting firm. It summarizes TransGraph's services including price forecasting, risk management, value chain analysis and risk consulting software. It then discusses the global economic outlook, with the Euro strengthening against the US Dollar despite divergent monetary policies between the ECB and Fed. It also covers trends in the US, Eurozone, Japanese and Chinese economies and currencies. The document concludes with an outlook for the US Dollar index to find support above 87 and rise to 94.
Business Monitor Key Views on Asia's economic, political and infrastructure a...Wei Xiang Tay
This month we've done something a little different. The first half is the general macro outlook (global + regional), and the second half, a slightly deeper dive into the infra sector, looking at key markets within APAC. This monthly presentation has a great mix of economics, politics and sectors analysis.
About 28,8% of the South African population is aged younger than 15 years and approximately 9,0% (5,3 million) is 60 years or older. Of those younger than 15 years of age, the majority reside in Gauteng (21,5%) and KwaZulu- Natal (21,1%). Of the elderly (those aged 60 years and older), the highest percentage 23,9% (1,27 million) reside in Gauteng. The proportion of elderly persons aged 60 and older is increasing over time.
Download the full release here: http://www.statssa.gov.za/?page_id=1854&PPN=P0302&SCH=7668
The latest mid-year population estimates show that South Africa’s population is estimated at 56,5 million people.
We take a closer look at South Africa's population as well as the prevalence of HIV in the country.
http://www.statssa.gov.za/?p=10263
Beyond the Bubble: Labour Party Conference 2014Ipsos UK
Ipsos MORI hosted the successful fringe event Beyond the Bubble at the 2014 Labour Party conference. The event explored how the political parties are doing in our polls, using our long-term trend data, as well as new findings from our monthly Political Monitor and Issues Index.
The Rt Hon Margaret Hodge, Fabian Women’s Ellie Cumbo and The Guardian’s chief political correspondent, Andrew Sparrow formed the Labour panel.Head of Political Research Gideon Skinner presented the Ipsos MORI view. Ben Page chaired the event.
This document discusses declining trust in and attachment to political parties and institutions in the UK. It finds that younger generations feel less connected to political parties than older generations. Trust in politicians has declined long-term. Support for third parties like UKIP and the Greens is rising as the dominance of Labour and the Conservatives falls. The public is increasingly divided on issues like the structure of government and the welfare state. The document concludes that the 2015 UK general election may see no party winning an outright majority due to these trends in public opinion.
2014 Public Awareness of public health for Public Health EnglandIpsos UK
A recent Ipsos MORI survey conducted on behalf of Public Health England (PHE) has shown that at the end of its first year, a third of the public say they have heard of the organisation and, when given an explanation of its role, two thirds would be confident in its advice.
Ben Page, Chief Exec, Ipsos MORI presented these slides on public opinion on the housing market in the UK for a Jones Lang LaSalle event in London on 3 November 2014.
Scottish Public Opinion Monitor: October 2014Ipsos UK
In the latest Ipsos MORI Scotland poll for STV News, Ipsos MORI found that the SNP party has a strong lead over Labour in voting intentions for Holyrood. Among those who told us that they would be ‘certain’ to vote in an immediate Scottish Parliament election, 57% say they would cast their constituency vote for the SNP, while 23% would back Scottish Labour, 8% would vote for the Scottish Conservatives and 6% for the Scottish Liberal Democrats. This gives the SNP a 34-point lead over Labour.
Ipsos MORI Political Monitor December 2014Ipsos UK
- The document is a political monitor from Ipsos MORI that provides data on UK voting intentions, satisfaction ratings of party leaders and the government, and trends over time.
- The latest data from December 2014 shows the Conservatives leading Labour by 3% among those certain to vote and by 4% among all adults.
- Satisfaction ratings in December 2014 were lowest for Nick Clegg at 24% and Ed Miliband at 25%, while David Cameron and Nigel Farage had ratings of 36% and 33% respectively.
- Trend data shows satisfaction levels for most party leaders have declined since they took on their roles, with the exception of Nigel Farage who maintains high approval among UKIP supporters
This document summarizes the results of an Ipsos MORI survey of 970 British adults conducted between November 28th and December 10th, 2014. It finds that the top issues facing Britain are the economy (42%), the NHS (33%), and crime/law and order (33%). It also provides the changes in percentages for each issue compared to the previous month's survey. The document provides contact information for Ipsos MORI and details about the survey methodology.
FleishmanHillard / Ipsos Study: Women Power and Money in the UKIpsos UK
This regular FleishmanHillard study is co-sponsored by Hearst Magazines and conducted by Ipsos MediaCT.
The fifth wave of the study covers, for the first time, the views of women in the UK, Germany, France and China, alongside those from the United States. This presentation provides some perspectives from women in Britain.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 26: The economic pulse of the worldIpsos UK
Britain sees largest drop in economic confidence among major European economies according to our latest Global @dvisor online survey conducted in 24 countries
Ipsos Global @dvisor 27: The economic pulse of the worldIpsos UK
Britain ends the year as one of the most economically pessimistic nations according to our latest Global @dvisor online survey conducted in 24 countries.
Báo cáo xu hướng người tiêu dùng Nielsen Q4 năm 2016Duy, Vo Hoang
The document discusses global consumer confidence in quarter 4 of 2016 based on a Nielsen survey. Some key findings:
- Global consumer confidence index was 101 for Q4 2016, up 3 points from Q1 2016. Confidence increased in 44 of 63 markets measured.
- North America saw the largest increase, with the US index rising 13 points to 123, driven by strong gains in personal finances, spending intentions, and job market confidence.
- Most regions finished 2016 with higher confidence than the start, except Africa/Middle East which declined 5 points due to drops in Egypt and Saudi Arabia.
[Nielsen global] Consumer Confidence Report Quý 4/2016Duy, Vo Hoang
The document discusses global consumer confidence in quarter 4 of 2016 based on a Nielsen survey. Some key findings:
- Global consumer confidence index was 101, up 3 points from Q1 2016, with 44 of 63 markets more confident than start of year.
- In North America, confidence was highest at 120, driven by a US index of 123.
- In Europe, confidence improved in 25 of 34 markets compared to Q1 2016, though was unchanged from Q3 2016 overall.
- Confidence increased modestly in most regions except Africa/Middle East, though finished higher than start of year in many markets.
1. Unemployment and poverty/social inequality remain the top global worries according to citizens in 24 countries.
2. A majority (62%) of citizens say their country is heading in the wrong direction.
3. Only one third (33%) of global citizens are satisfied with the way things are going in their country today.
Nielsen Q1-2016 global consumer confidence report digital finalVinh Nguyen
Global consumer confidence remained stable in Q1 2016, edging up one point to an index of 98. Confidence levels varied significantly across regions, with confidence declining in 17 European markets but rising in 11. In North America, US confidence was resilient at 110 but declined 6 points in Canada. In Western Europe, concerns about terrorism and immigration weighed on confidence in the UK and Germany, which declined 4 and 1 points respectively. Confidence also declined in France and Italy amid concerns about unemployment and terrorism.
The document provides survey results from Ipsos on public opinions around the world regarding whether things in their country are heading in the right direction or on the wrong track. In the US, 59% believe things are on the wrong track, with healthcare being the top concern at 33%. Globally, 56% believe things are on the wrong track, with unemployment the top concern at 33%. The document compares concerns over time and between countries.
Ipsos' latest Financial Security Monitor, a monthly survey carried out across 24 countries around individuals' financial security, shows European countries continuing to feel relatively financially insecure - six out of the eight bottom countries in our FS Monitor are EU member states.
La empresa de investigación de mercados Ipsos lanzó su más reciente informe “Monitor de Inflación Global”, para lo que encuestó a más de 23 mil personas con el fin de identificar cómo evalúan su situación financiera, además de conocer sus expectativas y preocupaciones de cara al aumento sostenido de la inflación en gran parte del mundo.
¿Creen los chilenos que aumentará la inflación el próximo año?
¿Como viven los chilenos?
¿Por qué suben los precios según los chilenos?
The document discusses the results of a survey conducted in 27 countries on perceptions of inclusiveness towards various religious and social groups. Some key findings include:
- Majorities in most majority-Christian countries surveyed see Christians as "real" nationals, while views are more mixed in non-Christian countries.
- Pluralities or small majorities in many countries accept atheists as nationals, though views are less supportive in some Eastern European, Asian, and Middle Eastern countries.
- Views of Muslims' national belonging are most positive in majority-Muslim countries, and in a few other countries like Canada, but more negative in some Eastern European nations.
- Perceptions of Jews' national belonging
This Credit Suisse Emerging Consumer Survey Databook provides granular detail of the market research that underpins the conclusions and themes highlighted in the Credit Suisse Emerging Consumer Survey 2014, a comprehensive and exclusive study of the consumption patterns and plans of individuals residing in nine key economies across the emerging world. Specifically, the markets we have incorporated in this survey are China, India, Brazil, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, South Africa and Turkey. In total, these markets account for over 3.5 billion people.
- Download the Emerging Consumer Survey Databook 2014 (PDF): http://bit.ly/1dQ2mGr
- Order the print version of the Global Wealth Report: http://bit.ly/1g3qJQX
Visit the Credit Suisse Research Institute website: http://bit.ly/18Cxa0p
The coronavirus effect on global economic sentimentDaniellaSeiler
Two-thirds of global executives surveyed now expect a sizable global economic contraction due to COVID-19, up from 42% one month ago. Sixty-one percent expect declining company profits, the highest share since 2008. While respondents see the most positive scenarios as most likely, outlooks have declined sharply in most regions since last month. Respondents in China and North America remain more optimistic than others about their home economies' prospects in the next six months.
This report presents findings of a Ipsos global survey conducted on behalf of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The survey studied people's outlook on their personal lives, challenges for their communities, and the direction of their countries/
A majority of people in 25 countries around the world think things in their country are off on the wrong track, according to this new global poll from Ipsos.
This document discusses the results of a survey conducted in 27 countries on perceptions of inclusiveness towards various religious and social groups. It finds that Christians are widely seen as "real" nationals in most majority Christian countries surveyed. Views are more mixed for other groups like Muslims, Jews, atheists and Buddhists. For example, only a few countries have a majority seeing Muslims as real nationals, while most of Southeast Asia and the Middle East have more ambiguous or negative views.
A new global Ipsos MORI study, carried out in 27 countries for the BBC, highlights the extent to which people think their society is divided. The poll, carried out online among adults aged under 65 in January and February this year, investigates public attitudes towards division and societal tensions around the world. The study finds that three in four people on average across the 27 countries (76%) think society in their country is divided. Countries that are most concerned about division are Serbia, where most people (93%) say their society is divided, Argentina (92%), Peru and Chile (both 90%). Those in Saudi Arabia are least likely to say their country is divided (34%) followed by China (48%) and Japan (52%).
What worries the world? è la nuova ricerca che Ipsos conduce a livello globale per capire quale sono le maggiori preoccupazioni da parte dei cittadini in 25 paesi.
Similar to Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index: July 2013 (20)
The document summarizes views from an Ipsos online community on Brexit 5 years after the referendum vote. Most people feel they have not noticed significant changes from Brexit yet and think the pandemic has overshadowed its effects. While some notice higher costs or shipping delays from EU countries, many are still confused about attributing rising prices to Brexit or Covid. There remains a divide between those who voted Leave and Remain, with both sides still convinced of their views despite most saying they have not been personally affected much either way. Overall, uncertainty persists around how Brexit will truly impact daily life.
Jayesh Navin Shah, from Ipsos MORI Public Affairs, presented our findings on cyber skills gaps and shortages in the UK at the SC Digital Congress 2021. The findings are taken from Ipsos MORI’s report, Understanding the UK Cyber Security Labour Market 2021 study, carried out on behalf of the UK Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.
https://www.sccongressuk.com/digital-congress/
Jayesh Navin Shah, from Ipsos MORI Public Affairs, presented our findings on cyber resilience among UK businesses and charities at the SC Digital Congress 2021. The findings are taken from Ipsos MORI’s Cyber Security Breaches Survey 2021, carried out on behalf of the UK Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.
https://www.sccongressuk.com/digital-congress/
Ipsos Global Advisor: The Perils of Perception: Environment and Climate ChangeIpsos UK
The document discusses a survey conducted in 30 markets about individual actions to tackle climate change. While most people agreed they understand the actions needed, there were widespread misperceptions. Respondents underestimated the most impactful actions like having fewer children and overestimated less important actions like recycling. They also lacked awareness of climate impacts already occurring. The document examines perceptions of various individual actions. Respondents correctly identified some high-impact options but overestimated others like reducing packaging and underestimated important actions like home renovations for efficiency.
Ipsos Community: Quotes following the events around the vigil for Sarah EverardIpsos UK
The document contains opinions from several individuals on a vigil and the interactions between police and protesters. One person recalls being assaulted in the past and no longer feeling safe at night. Others discuss the right of the public to peacefully gather while following social distancing, and how the event initially remained peaceful until some protesters became abusive toward police, with one officer being told they should have died.
The 2020 Global Infrastructure Index - undertaken in partnership by GIIA and Ipsos MORI and the largest global survey of its kind looking at public attitudes towards infrastructure and investment – shows that the British public believe investment in infrastructure should form a key part of the UK Government’s plan to secure economic recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic.
Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, women of all ages across Britain are more pessimistic and worried than their male counterparts. This new webinar explores why.
Looking at data around the balance of responsibility and mental load at work and at home for women compared to men, the additional stresses that the pandemic has put on women of all ages, and the specific damages it has made to women's work-life balances and future ability to progress in a career, our expert speakers will examine how the disease - despite being more prevalent in men - might be more damaging to women.
Ipsos has analysed data from more than 2,000 women of working age across Britain to examine what is happening, explore the causes and explain what can be done to better support those women being hit hardest by the pandemic.
Speakers include:
Jane Merrick, Policy Editor, the I newspaper
Kully Kaur-Ballagan, Research Director, Public Affairs
Jordana Moser, Business research specialist, Ipsos MORI
Kelly Beaver, Managing Director, Ipsos MORI Social Research Institute (Chair)
With just a few weeks to go before the 2020 presidential election in the US, Ipsos MORI hosted this webinar to explore the complexities and current uncertainties regarding the process and outcome of the election.
As part of the webinar, Clifford Young, our President of Public Affairs in the US, shared findings from our latest political polling.
Full webinar: https://youtu.be/d012B5iwSzQ
Sexual orientation and attitudes to LGBTQ+ in BritainIpsos UK
New Ipsos MORI research shows that Britons think LGBTQ+ communities face discrimination in Britain today, but opinion is split regarding the progression of LGBTQ+ rights.
COVID-19: Conspiracies and Confusions and the link with Social MediaIpsos UK
There is a toxic mix between underlying beliefs, misleading information and how people act around the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic according to a new survey by Ipsos MORI and The Policy Institute and King's College London.
Solving the Cyber Security Skills Gap with DCMSIpsos UK
Taking findings from Ipsos MORI’s latest cyber security labour market study for DCMS, published in March 2020, we explore three areas in this webinar:
1. The demand for cyber skills in the UK
2. The training and qualifications landscape
3. Recruitment and diversity
Boris Johnson’s favourability rating increases sharply, with the Conservative Party’s image also showing some improvement
By a small margin, the public now think the country is heading in the right direction
One in two Britons are yet to form a view new Labour leader Keir Starmer. Those who do express a view expect him to improve the party’s fortunes by a seven-to-one margin
Economic optimism has fallen to its lowest level since the 2008 financial crisis, according to Ipsos MORI’s new Political Monitor. The new poll, conducted between 13-16 March, so before some of this week’s emergency measures were announced, shows seven in ten (69%) now say they think the economy will get worse in the next 12 months – this is up from 42% in February. Just 15% think that the economy will improve, leaving an Economic Optimism Index score of -54. The last time pessimism was this low was in November 2008 (at its worst during the 2008 crisis 75% thought the economy would get worse). Despite this pessimism, around half (49%) believe the Government is handling the coronavirus outbreak well (35% say badly).
International Women's Day 2020: What is acceptable behaviour in the workplace?Ipsos UK
A new survey of more than 20,000 people in 27 countries from Ipsos MORI and King's College London for International Women's Day 2020 finds significant differences in what women and men see as acceptable workplace behaviour.
Coronavirus Opinion and Reaction - Ipsos MORIIpsos UK
The survey found that:
- Awareness of the coronavirus is high in the UK, but few see it as a personal threat, though more than two in five see it as a threat globally.
- Confidence is highest in local health services and health professionals to deal with the outbreak.
- Less than one in five in the UK believe the virus has been contained, and only one in four think the situation is being exaggerated by the media.
- The most common changes to personal behavior that UK residents would make to protect themselves are avoiding airline travel and washing hands more often.
The Perils of Perception 2020: Causes of DeathIpsos UK
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception study highlights public misperceptions across 32 countries about the proportion of people who die from diseases, violence, transport injuries and other causes. While patterns differ in different countries, overall on average people tend to underestimate how many deaths are caused by cancers and cardiovascular disease, and overestimate how many are caused by transport injuries, substance misuse and violence.
Public Perception of Environmental Impact: Ipsos Omnibus PollIpsos UK
As concern about the environment continues to rise, 81% of Britons believe that the Government should take partial or full responsibility for reducing the harm we do to the environment. Within this, 1 in 5 believe the Government should take main responsibility while 61% believe it should be split between the Government, Businesses and the public, an Ipsos MORI Omnibus Survey has found.
Ipsos MORI Social Media Britain November 2019Ipsos UK
The key findings of the November 2019 edition of our new Social Media Britain report - powered by Synthesio - include:
Overall Brexit continued to lead the conversation in November – however there was a 59% increase in NHS related mentions vs. October. This was driven in part by Corbyn revealing documents that he says indicate a Conservative government would sell off the NHS as part of a US trade deal.
The general election, which is the focus of our deep dive this month, as well as the London Bridge terror attack - both contributed to sizeable shifts in social conversation.
Following the ITV Leaders Debate, there was a sharp increase in conversation around the general election. The release of the Labour and Conservative manifestos seeing further spikes in volume towards the end of November.
When comparing Johnson and Corbyn activity on Twitter in November there were some notable differences in the focus of their posts. Whilst Brexit was mentioned across 42% of Johnson’s tweets – it was only mentioned within 6% of Corbyn’s. Corbyn focused mainly on the NHS, which was mentioned in just over a third of his tweets.
Ipsos MORI 2019 General Election Campign Tracker - HousingIpsos UK
New research from Ipsos MORI finds the major housing parties included in Conservative, Labour and Liberal Democrat manifestos are popular, but the public also have strong doubts that anyone will improve housing if elected.
Ipsos MORI Political Monitor - 6 December 2019Ipsos UK
Conservatives hold 12-point lead over Labour heading into final week of the election campaign
Corbyn has improved leader satisfaction ratings since October but still trails Johnson
NHS of increased importance to voters as an election issue
One in four may change their minds on who to vote for before next Thursday
More of the British public are opposed to a second referendum on Scottish independence next year than support one
विवादास्पद फिल्म के ट्रेलर से गाली-गलौज वाले दृश्य हटा दिए गए हैं, और जुर्माना लगाया गया है। सुप्रीम कोर्ट और बॉम्बे हाई कोर्ट दोनों ने फिल्म की रिलीज पर रोक लगा दी है और उसे निलंबित कर दिया है। पहले यह फिल्म 7 जून और फिर 14 जून को रिलीज होने वाली थी, लेकिन अब यह 21 जून को रिलीज हो रही है।
La defensa del expresidente Juan Orlando Hernández, declarado culpable por narcotráfico en EE. UU., solicitó este viernes al juez Kevin Castel que imponga una condena mínima de 40 años de prisión.
19 जून को बॉम्बे हाई कोर्ट ने विवादित फिल्म ‘हमारे बारह’ को 21 जून को थिएटर में रिलीज करने का रास्ता साफ कर दिया, हालांकि यह सुनिश्चित करने के बाद कि फिल्म निर्माता कुछ आपत्तिजनक अंशों को हटा दें।
Federal Authorities Urge Vigilance Amid Bird Flu Outbreak | The Lifesciences ...The Lifesciences Magazine
Federal authorities have advised the public to remain vigilant but calm in response to the ongoing bird flu outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly known as bird flu.
Christian persecution in Islamic countries has intensified, with alarming incidents of violence, discrimination, and intolerance. This article highlights recent attacks in Nigeria, Pakistan, Egypt, Iran, and Iraq, exposing the multifaceted challenges faced by Christian communities. Despite the severity of these atrocities, the Western world's response remains muted due to political, economic, and social considerations. The urgent need for international intervention is underscored, emphasizing that without substantial support, the future of Christianity in these regions is at grave risk.
https://ecspe.org/the-rise-of-christian-persecution-in-islamic-countries/
16062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
मद्रास उच्च न्यायालय के सेवानिवृत्त न्यायाधीश और केंद्र और राज्य सरकार के नौकरशाहों सहित आठ अन्य लोगों की अध्यक्षता वाली एक उच्च स्तरीय समिति ने 2021 में NEET परीक्षा को खत्म करने की सिफारिश की थी। महत्वपूर्ण बात यह है कि रिपोर्ट में 2010-11 में ग्रामीण पृष्ठभूमि से तमिल छात्रों की संख्या में 61.5% की भारी गिरावट को दर्शाया गया है। इसके बजाय मेट्रो छात्रों में वृद्धि दर्ज की गई है।
18062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
La defensa del expresidente Juan Orlando Hernández, declarado culpable por narcotráfico en EE. UU., solicitó este viernes al juez Kevin Castel que imponga una condena mínima de 40 años de prisión.
Shark Tank Jargon | Operational ProfitabilityTheUnitedIndian
Don't let fancy business words confuse you! This blog is your cheat sheet to understanding the Shark Tank Jargon. We'll translate all the confusing terms like "valuation" (how much the company is worth) and "royalty" (a fee for using someone's idea). You'll be swimming with the Sharks like a pro in no time!
17062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
Why We Chose ScyllaDB over DynamoDB for "User Watch Status"ScyllaDB
Yichen Wei and Adam Drennan share the architecture and technical requirements behind "user watch status" for a major global media streaming service, what that meant for their database, the pros and cons of the many options they considered for replacing DynamoDB, why they ultimately chose ScyllaDB, and their lessons learned so far.
19 जून को बॉम्बे हाई कोर्ट ने विवादित फिल्म ‘हमारे बारह’ को 21 जून को थिएटर में रिलीज करने का रास्ता साफ कर दिया, हालांकि यह सुनिश्चित करने के बाद कि फिल्म निर्माता कुछ आपत्तिजनक अंशों को हटा दें।
Apna Punjab Media is a Punjabi newspaper that covers local and global news, cultural updates, and community events. It's a trusted source for Punjabi-speaking communities, offering a mix of traditional values and modern insights into Punjab's vibrant life and heritage.
1. Global @dvisor
A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
The Economic Pulse of the World
Citizens in 25 Countries Assess the Current State of their
Country’s Economy for a Total Global Perspective
2. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
2
These are the findings of the Global @dvisor Wave 46 (G@46),
an Ipsos survey conducted between June 4th and June 18th, 2013.
• The survey instrument is conducted monthly in 25 countries via the Ipsos Online Panel system.
• For the results of the survey herein, an total sample of 19,514 adults age 18-64 in the US and Canada, and age 16-64
in all other countries, was interviewed between June 4th and June 18th 2013.
• Approximately 1000+ individuals were surveyed in Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Great Britain,
India, Italy, Japan, Spain, and the United States of America.
• Approximately 500+ individuals were surveyed in Argentina, Belgium, Hungary, Finland, Indonesia, Mexico, Norway,
Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Sweden and Turkey.
• Sample characteristics: the sample is made up of “Primary Consumers” who are a comparable, standardized
weighted group in each country based on a minimum level of education and income.
• For a majority of the countries surveyed the Primary Consumer population is also representative of the general
population based on the latest census. More details can be found at www.ipsosglobaladvisor.com
• The precision of Ipsos online polls are calculated using a credibility interval with a poll of 1,000 accurate to +/- 3.5
percentage points and of 500 accurate to +/- 5.0 percentage points.
For more information on the Ipsos use of credibility intervals, please visit the Ipsos website.
3. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
3
Analytic Components…
There are three analytic components that make up the findings of this monthly Economic Pulse report.
Each question is tracked and analyzed from questions dealing with:
• Thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current
economic situation in [insert country]? Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat
bad or very bad?
The currently perceived macroeconomic state of
the respondent‟s country:
• Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
The currently perceived state of the local economy:
• Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local
area to be much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or
much weaker than it is now?
A six month outlook for the local economy:
4. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
4
THE WORLD at a GLANCE
THE
WORLD
at a
GLANCE
5. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
5
Global Aggregate Inching Down
The current global aggregate of 25 countries slides one point this month as 38% of
global citizens describe the current economic situation in their country as
“good”.
This month reflects stability and a slight dip, depending on the angle of interpretation.
The one-point decline is driven largely by the addition of Norway as a regular Global
@dvisor country: it declined two points to 96% this wave. Without Norway, the global
aggregate remains unchanged for the fourth consecutive month at 36%.
Despite this global stability overall, no geographic region reflects a positive
improvement this month. The greatest decline is experienced by Latin America (-3
points to 30%), driven primarily by Brazil (-7 to 35%).
The Middle East and Africa region experienced a two point decline due to South
Africa’s aggregate dipping down twelve points to its all time lowest level of 19%. The
Asia Pacific region is also down two points to 41%.
Despite a three point increase in Canada (66%), North America’s aggregate score
remains unchanged at 48% due to a two point decline in the United States (31%).
Europe also remains unchanged this wave at 32%.
6. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
6
Closer look at Europe
32%
96%
71%
66%
45%
27%
21%
19%
16%
10%
6%
5%
4%
Europe
Norway
Sweden
Germany
Finland
Belgium
Netherlands
Great Britain
Poland
Hungary
Italy
France
Spain
Two additional European countries were added to the Global
Economic Pulse this month on an ad-hoc basis: The Netherlands
and Finland*.
– In Finland, where inflation settled to the slowest place in
nearly three years in June, about half (45%) the population
rates their current national economy as “good”.
– Economic confidence in the Netherlands is considerably
lower, with two in ten (21%) saying the national economy is
“good”, perhaps reflecting their ongoing housing market
slump and rising unemployment.
The European aggregate, including these two Plus and Play
countries as well as Norway, added to the list of regular Global
@dvisor countries, nets out at one in three (32%) saying the
economy in their country is “good”.
Though Europe continues so sit low in regional rankings on
national economic confidence ratings, three European countries
are in the top 5 of all surveyed this month: Norway (ranks 1st at
96%), Sweden (3rd at 71%) and Germany (5th at 66%).
(Note that the Netherlands and Finland are not included in global and regional
aggregate reporting, with the exception of this slide, in order to allow for tracking.)
7. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
7
After a noticeable spike last month due to the addition of Norway to the global
aggregate, the average global economic assessment of national economies surveyed
in 25 countries inches lower as 38% of global citizens rate their national
economies to be „good.” Without Norway, the aggregate assessment remains the
same for the fourth month in a row at 36%.
For a second month in a row, Norway (96%) continues to champion the national
economic average, far ahead of those next in line: Saudi Arabia (85%), Sweden
(71%), Canada (66%) and Germany (66%). Once again, at the lower end of the scale
are European countries – Spain (4%), France (5%), Italy (6%), and Hungary (10%).
Countries with the greatest improvements in this wave: Saudi Arabia (85%, 4pts),
Germany (66%, 4pts), Canada (66%, 3pts), Australia (57%, 3pts), Indonesia (44%,
3pts) and Turkey (50%, 2pts).
Countries with the greatest declines: South Africa (19%, -12pts), Japan (18%, -9pts),
China (59%, -7pts), Brazil (35%, -7pts) and Hungary (10%, -3pts).
Global Average of National Economic Assessment (38%)
Down One Point
8. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
8
When asked to assess their current local economies, three in ten respondents (28%)
of the 25 countries surveyed agree the state of the current economy in their
local area is „good‟. With Norway as a player in the aggregate, this number has not
changed since last sounding. Without Norway, the average of local economic
assessment is down two points to 26%.
Norway (60%) tops the rankings, with Saudi Arabia (56%) close behind, followed by
Sweden (48%), Canada (47%), China (43%), Germany (43%), Australia (38%) and
India (38%).
Countries that ranked their local economy the lowest are Spain (7%), Italy (8%), Japan
(8%), France (10%), Hungary (10%) and Poland (16%).
Countries with the greatest improvements in this wave: Canada (47%, 6pts), Great
Britain (20%, 5pts), Belgium (19%, 5pts) and France (10%, 4pts).
Countries with the greatest declines: Brazil (28%, -7pts), Sweden (48%, -5pts), China
(43%, -5pts), Argentina (20%, -4pts), South Africa (20%, -4pts) and Japan (8%, -4pts).
Global Average of Local Economic Assessment (28%)
Unchanged since last sounding
9. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
9
Two in ten respondents (22%) expect that their local economy will be stronger
six months from now, down one point from last month sounding.
Six in ten Brazilians (59%) predict their local economies will be stronger in the next six
months. The rest of the highest ranking countries are: Saudi Arabia (51%), India
(45%), Argentina (41%), Mexico (40%), China (38%) and Indonesia (33%).
The smallest percentages of those who expect their future local economies will be
“stronger” are in France (3%), Belgium (5%), Hungary (10%), Great Britain (12%), Italy
(12%) and Poland (12%)
Countries with the greatest improvements in this wave: Argentina (41%, 5pts), Canada
(17%, 2pts), South Korea (17%, 2pts), South Africa (16%, 2pts) and Poland (12%,
2pts).
Countries with the greatest declines: Japan (15%, -13pts), Brazil (59%, -5pts), Italy
(12%, -3pts), United States (23%, -2pts), Russia (14%, -2pts) and India (45%, -1pts).
Global Average of Future Outlook for Local Economy
(22%) Down One Point
10. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
10
Those Countries Where the National Area Economic Assessment…
is
HIGHEST
this month
has experienced an
IMPROVEMENT
since last sounding
has experienced a
DECLINE
since last
sounding
is
LOWEST
this month
Norway 96% Saudi Arabia 4 South Africa 12 Spain 4%
Saudi Arabia 85% Germany 4 Japan 9 France 5%
Sweden 71% Canada 3 China 7 Italy 6%
Canada 66% Australia 3 Brazil 7 Hungary 10%
Germany 66% Indonesia 3 Hungary 3 Poland 16%
India 60% Turkey 2 India 2 Japan 18%
China 59% Italy 2 United States 2 South Korea 18%
Australia 57% France 2 Great Britain 2 Great Britain 19%
Turkey 50% Russia 1 Norway 2 South Africa 19%
Indonesia 44% Argentina 1 Sweden 1 Argentina 26%
Brazil 35% South Korea 1 Belgium 27%
Mexico 31% United States 31%
Thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
1. National Economic Assessments: Countries at
a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
11. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
11
1. National Economic Assessment: Regions at
a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
REGION
(in descending order by NET)
NET
„Good‟
CHANGE
(since last
sounding)
Middle East/Africa 51% 2%
North America 48% N/C
BRIC 46% 4%
APAC 41% 2%
Europe 32% N/C
LATAM 30% 3%
G-8 Countries 30% N/C
Thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
12. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
12
2. Local Economic Assessment: Countries at
a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
Those Countries Where the Local Area Economic Assessment…
is
HIGHEST
this month
has experienced an
IMPROVEMENT
since last sounding
has experienced a
DECLINE
since last
sounding
is
LOWEST
this month
Norway 60% Canada 6 Brazil 7 Spain 7%
Saudi Arabia 56% Great Britain 5 Sweden 5 Italy 8%
Sweden 48% Belgium 5 China 5 Japan 8%
Canada 47% France 4 Argentina 4 France 10%
China 43% Mexico 3 South Africa 4 Hungary 10%
Germany 43% Poland 3 Japan 4 Poland 16%
Australia 38% Indonesia 2 Norway 3 South Korea 18%
India 38% Australia 1 India 2 Belgium 19%
Turkey 36% South Korea 1 Saudi Arabia 1 Argentina 20%
Indonesia 31% Hungary 1 Great Britain 20%
Brazil 28% Russia 20%
United States 28% South Africa 20%
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy
13. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
13
REGION
(in descending order by NET)
NET
„Strong‟
Top 3 Box (5-6-7)
CHANGE
(since last sounding)
North America 37% 2%
Middle East/Africa 37% 2%
BRIC 32% 4%
APAC 28% 1%
LATAM 24% 2%
Europe 24% 1%
G-8 Countries 23% 1%
2. Local Economic Assessment: Regions at
a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy
14. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
14
Countries where the Assessment of the Local Economic Strengthening …
is
HIGHEST
this month
has experienced an
IMPROVEMENT
since last sounding
has experienced a
DECLINE
since last sounding
is
LOWEST
this month
Brazil 59% Argentina 5 Japan 13 France 3%
Saudi Arabia 51% Norway 3 Brazil 5 Belgium 5%
India 45% Canada 2 Italy 3 Norway 10%
Argentina 41% South Korea 2 United States 2 Hungary 10%
Mexico 40% South Africa 2 Russia 2 Great Britain 12%
China 38% Poland 2 India 1 Italy 12%
Indonesia 33% Sweden 2 China 1 Poland 12%
Turkey 27% Hungary 2 Spain 1 Sweden 12%
United States 23% Mexico 1 Belgium 1 Australia 14%
Canada 17% Germany 1 Russia 14%
South Korea 17% Germany 15%
South Africa 16% Japan 15%
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
3. Six Month Outlook on the Local Economy: Countries
at a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
15. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
15
3. Six Month Outlook on Local Economy: Regions at
a Glance Compared to Last Wave…
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
REGION
(in descending order by NET)
NET
„Stronger‟
CHANGE
(since last sounding)
LATAM 47% 1%
BRIC 39% 2%
Middle East/Africa 31% N/C
APAC 25% 2%
North America 20% N/C
G-8 Countries 14% 2%
Europe 11% 1%
16. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
16
DETAILED FINDINGS
17. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
17
Assessing The Current Economic
Situation …
Detailed Tables B.3
…in Their Country
18. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
18
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic
situation in [insert country]? Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
Global Citizens Assess the Current Economic Situation in their
Country as “Good”
38%
96%
85%
71%
66%
66%
60%
59%
57%
50%
45%
44%
35%
31%
31%
31%
27%
26%
21%
19%
19%
18%
18%
16%
10%
6%
5%
4%
Total
Norway
Saudi Arabia
Sweden
Canada
Germany
India
China
Australia
Turkey
Finland
Indonesia
Brazil
Mexico
Russia
United States
Belgium
Argentina
Netherlands
Great Britain
South Africa
Japan
South Korea
Poland
Hungary
Italy
France
Spain
„Very Good / Somewhat Good‟
19. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
19
Global Average Tracked - Global Citizens Assess the Current
Economic Situation in their Country as “Good”:…
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
56%55%
45%
32%
29%
38%38%39%39%40%41%40%
42%41%41%40%41%
38%
40%41%40%40%
38%39%38%39%38%39%39%39%38%37%37%38%38%37%36%35%36%37%37%36%36%
39%38%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
Apr/07
Oct/07
Apr/08
Nov/08
Apr/09
Nov/Jan/10
Apr/10
May/10
Jun/10
Jul/10
Aug/10
Sep/10
Oct/10
Nov/10
Dec/10
Jan/11
Feb/11
Mar/11
Apr/11
May/11
Jun/11
Jul/11
Aug/11
Sep/11
Oct/11
Nov/11
Dec/11
Jan/12
Feb/12
Mar/12
Apr/12
May/12
Jun/12
Jul/12
Aug/12
Sep/12
Oct-12
Nov-12
Dec-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Apr-13
May-13
Jun-13
Total Good
1
21. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
21
38%
85%
66%
66%
57%
44%
50%
6%
5%
31%
26%
18%
31%
27%
16%
4%
71%
60%
96%
31%
19%
10%
59%
35%
18%
19%
Total (-3)
Saudi Arabia (+4)
Germany (+4)
Canada (+3)
Australia (+3)
Indonesia (+3)
Turkey (+2)
Italy (+2)
France (+2)
Russia (+1)
Argentina (+1)
South Korea (+1)
Mexico (N/C)
Belgium (N/C)
Poland (N/C)
Spain (N/C)
Sweden (-1)
India (-2)
Norway (-2)
United States (-2)
Great Britain (-2)
Hungary (-3)
China (-7)
Brazil (-7)
Japan (-9)
South Africa (-12)
Countries Ranked and Marked By Change In Assessment From Last Month
(Left Column) Thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert
country]? Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
% Very Good / Somewhat Good
Green marks countries experiencing improvement;
Blue marks countries with no change from last month;
Red marks countries experiencing a decline…
22. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
22
4%
4%
3%
3%
3%
2%
2%
2%
1%
1%
1%
0%
0%
0%
0%
-1%
-2%
-2%
-2%
-2%
-3%
-7%
-7%
-9%
-12%
-15% -10% -5% 0% 5% 10% 15%
Countries Ranked by Net Improvement, Decline or No Change Compared to
Last Month: Thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
Saudi Arabia (+4)
Germany (+4)
Canada (+3)
Australia (+3)
Indonesia (+3)
Turkey (+2)
Italy (+2)
France (+2)
Russia (+1)
Argentina (+1)
South Korea (+1)
Mexico (N/C)
Belgium (N/C)
Poland (N/C)
Spain (N/C)
Sweden (-1)
India (-2)
Norway (-2)
United States (-2)
Great Britain (-2)
Hungary (-3)
China (-7)
Brazil (-7)
Japan (-9)
South Africa (-12)
23. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
23
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
Assessing the Current Economic Situation by All Regions:
64%
48%
45%
30%
32%
61%
41%
51%
30%
71%
46%
51%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
Apr2007
Oct2007
Apr2008
Nov2008
Apr2009
Nov/Jan/10
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sep2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sep2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
North America (Can/US) LATAM Europe APAC G8 BRIC Middle East/Africa
Very Good / Somewhat Good
24. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
24
North American (Canada/US) Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
N/C
47%
31%
80%
66%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Apr2007
Oct2007
Apr2008
Nov2008
Apr2009
Nov/Jan2010
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar/11
Apr/11
May/11
Jun/11
Jul/11
Aug/11
Sept/11
Oct/11
Nov/11
Dec/11
Jan/12
Feb/12
Mar/12
Apr/12
May/12
Jun/12
Jul/12
Aug/12
Sep/12
Oct/12
Nov/12
Dec/12
Jan/13
Feb/13
Mar/13
Apr/13
May/13
Jun/13
United States Canada
Very Good / Somewhat Good
25. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
25
LATAM Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
35%
50%
26%
42%
31%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
Apr-07
Oct-07
Apr-08
Nov-08
Apr-09
Nov-09/Jan-10
Mar-10
Apr-10
May-10
Jun-10
Jul-10
Aug-10
Sept-10
Oct-10
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
Feb-11
Mar-11
Apr-11
May-11
Jun-11
Jul-11
Aug-11
Sept-11
Oct-11
Nov-11
Dec-11
Jan-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
Apr-12
May-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
Aug-12
Sep-12
Oct-12
Nov-12
Dec-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Apr-13
May-13
Jun-13
Brazil Argentina Mexico
3
Very Good / Somewhat Good
26. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
26
European Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
N/C
59%
66%
27%
5%
4%
64%
71%
19%
27%
6%
10%
96%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Apr-07
Oct-07
Apr-08
Nov-08
Apr-09
Nov/Jan2010
Mar-10
Apr-10
May-10
Jun-10
Jul-10
Aug-10
Sep-10
Oct-10
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
Feb-11
Mar-11
Apr-11
May-11
Jun-11
Jul-11
Aug-11
Sept-11
Oct-11
Nov-11
Dec-11
Jan-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
Apr-12
May-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
Aug-12
Sep-12
Oct-12
Nov-12
Dec-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Apr-13
May-13
Jun-13
Germany France Spain Sweden Great Britain Belgium Italy Hungary Norway Poland
Very Good / Somewhat Good
27. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
27
APAC Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
78%
57%
90%
59%
88%
60%
18%
65%
31%
16%
18%
44%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Apr-07
Oct-07
Apr-08
Nov-08
Apr-09
Nov-09/Jan-10
Mar-10
Apr-10
May-10
Jun-10
Jul-10
Aug-10
Sep-10
Oct-10
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
Feb-11
Mar-11
Apr-11
May-11
Jun-11
Jul-11
Aug-11
Sept-11
Oct-11
Nov-11
Dec-11
Jan-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
Apr-12
May-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
Aug-12
Sep-12
Oct-12
Nov-12
Dec-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Apr-13
May-13
Jun-13
Australia China India Japan Russia South Korea Indonesia
Very Good / Somewhat Good
2
28. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
28
G8 Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
19%
80%
66%
27%
5%
59%
66%
28%
6%
18%
65%
31%
47%
31%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100% Apr-07
Oct-07
Apr-08
Nov-08
Apr-09
Nov-09/Jan-10
Mar-10
Apr-10
May-10
Jun-10
Jul-10
Aug-10
Sept-10
Oct-10
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
Feb-11
Mar-11
Apr-11
May-11
Jun-11
Jul-11
Aug-11
Sept-11
Oct-11
Nov-11
Dec-11
Jan-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
Apr-12
May-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
Aug-12
Sep-12
Oct-12
Nov-12
Dec-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Apr-13
May-13
Jun-13
Great Britain Canada France Germany Italy Japan Russia United States
Very Good / Somewhat Good
N/C
29. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
29
BRIC Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
42%
35%
65%
31%
88%
60%
90%
59%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Apr-07
Oct-07
Apr-08
Nov-08
Apr-09
Nov09/Jan10
Mar-10
Apr-10
May-10
Jun-10
Jul-10
Aug-10
Sept-10
Oct-10
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
Feb-11
Mar-11
Apr-11
May-11
Jun-11
Jul-11
Aug-11
Sept-11
Oct-11
Nov-11
Dec-11
Jan-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
Apr-12
May-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
Aug-12
Sep-12
Oct-12
Nov-12
Dec-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Apr-13
May-13
Jun-13
Brazil Russia India China
Very Good / Somewhat Good
4
30. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
30
Middle East/African Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation
Now thinking about our economic situation, how would you describe the current economic situation in [insert country]?
Is it very good, somewhat good, somewhat bad or very bad?
50%
73%
85%
38%
19%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
N09/J10
Mar-10
Apr-10
May-10
Jun-10
Jul-10
Aug-10
Sep-10
Oct-10
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
Feb-11
Mar-11
Apr-11
May-11
Jun-11
Jul-11
Aug-11
Sept-11
Oct-11
Nov-11
Dec-11
Jan-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
Apr-12
May-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
Aug-12
Sep-12
Oct-12
Nov-12
Dec-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Apr-13
May-13
Jun-13
Turkey Saudi Arabia South Africa
Very Good / Somewhat Good
2
31. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
31
Assessing The Economy…
Detailed Tables B.6
…In Their Local Area
32. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
32
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7, where
7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy
Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy In Their Local Area
is Strong…
28%
60%
56%
48%
47%
43%
43%
38%
38%
36%
35%
31%
28%
28%
23%
20%
20%
20%
20%
19%
19%
18%
16%
10%
10%
8%
8%
7%
Total
Norway
Saudi Arabia
Sweden
Canada
China
Germany
Australia
India
Turkey
Finland
Indonesia
Brazil
United States
Mexico
Argentina
Great Britain
Russia
South Africa
Belgium
Netherlands
South Korea
Poland
France
Hungary
Italy
Japan
Spain
% Strong (Top 3: 5-6-7)
33. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
33
Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy
In Their Local Area is Strong
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
N/C
28%
30%29%29%29%30%30%30%31%30%30%31%
29%30%30%30%31%
29%30%29%29%29%29%29%30%29%29%28%29%
27%27%27%27%26%27%27%27%27%28%28%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
Mar/10
Apr/10
May/10
Jun/10
Jul/10
Aug/10
Sept/10
Oct/10
Nov/10
Dec/10
Jan/11
Feb/11
Mra/11
Apr/11
May/11
Jun/11
Jul/11
Aug/11
Sept/11
Oct/11
Nov/11
Dec/11
Jan/12
Feb/12
Mar/12
Apr/12
May/12
Jun/12
Jul/12
Aug/12
Sep/12
Oct/12
Nov/12
Dec/12
Jan/13
Feb/13
Mar/13
Apr/13
May/13
Jun/13
Total - % Strong (Top 3: 5-6-7)
35. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
35
28%
47%
20%
19%
10%
23%
16%
31%
38%
18%
10%
43%
36%
28%
20%
8%
7%
56%
38%
60%
20%
20%
8%
48%
43%
28%
Total (-2)
Canada (+6)
Great Britain (+5)
Belgium (+5)
France (+4)
Mexico (+3)
Poland (+3)
Indonesia (+2)
Australia (+1)
South Korea (+1)
Hungary (+1)
Germany (N/C)
Turkey (N/C)
United States (N/C)
Russia (N/C)
Italy (N/C)
Spain (N/C)
Saudi Arabia (-1)
India (-2)
Norway (-3)
Argentina (-4)
South Africa (-4)
Japan (-4)
Sweden (-5)
China (-5)
Brazil (-7)
Countries Ranked and Marked By Change In Assessment From Last Month
(Left Column):
Green marks countries experiencing improvement;
Blue marks countries with no change from last month;
Red marks countries experiencing a decline.
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7, where 7 means a very strong
economy today and 1 means a very weak economy…
36. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
36
6%
5%
5%
4%
3%
3%
2%
1%
1%
1%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
-1%
-2%
-3%
-4%
-4%
-4%
-5%
-5%
-7%
-25% -20% -15% -10% -5% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%
Countries Ranked by Net Improvement, Decline or No Change Compared to
Last Month:
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7, where 7 means a very strong
economy today and 1 means a very weak economy…
Canada (+6)
Great Britain (+5)
Belgium (+5)
France (+4)
Mexico (+3)
Poland (+3)
Indonesia (+2)
Australia (+1)
South Korea (+1)
Hungary (+1)
Germany (N/C)
Turkey (N/C)
United States (N/C)
Russia (N/C)
Italy (N/C)
Spain (N/C)
Saudi Arabia (-1)
India (-2)
Norway (-3)
Argentina (-4)
South Africa (-4)
Japan (-4)
Sweden (-5)
China (-5)
Brazil (-7)
37. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
37
All Regions
Assess the Strength of Their Local Economy
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
32%
37%
25%
24%
24%
37%
28%
21%
23%
46%
32%
35%
37%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
55% Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
North America LATAM Europe APAC G-8 Countries BRIC Middle East/Africa
% Strong (Top 3 5-6-7)
38. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
38
North American Countries
Assess the Strength of Their Local Economy
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
% Strong (Top 3 5-6-7)
2
20%
28%
44%
47%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
55%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb20122
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
United States Canada
39. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
39
LATAM Countries
Assess the Strength of Their Local Economy
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
38%
28%
19%
20%20%
23%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
55%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sep2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Brazil Argentina Mexico
% Strong (Top 3 5-6-7)
2
40. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
40
European Countries
Assess the Strength of Their Local Economy
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
27%
43%
10%
13%
7%
44%
48%
20%
15%
19%
18%
8%
60%
11%
10%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
Mar-10
Apr-10
May-10
Jun-10
Jul-10
Aug-10
Sept-10
Oct-10
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
Feb-11
Mar-11
Apr-11
May-11
Jun-11
Jul-11
Aug-11
Sept-11
Oct-11
Nov-11
Dec-11
Jan-12
Feb-12
Mar-12
Apr-12
May-12
Jun-12
Jul-12
Aug-12
Sep-12
Oct-12
Nov-12
Dec-12
Jan-13
Feb-13
Mar-13
Apr-13
May-13
Jun-13
Germany France Spain Sweden Great Britain Belgium Italy Norway Hungary Poland
% Strong (Top 3 5-6-7)
1
41. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
41
APAC Countries
Assess the Strength of Their Local Economy
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
56%
38%
43%
61%
38%
4%
8%
23%
20%
16%
18%
37%
31%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Australia China India Japan Russia South Korea Indonesia
% Strong (Top 3 5-6-7)
1
42. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
42
G8 Countries
Assess the Strength of Their Local Economy
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
% Strong (Top 3 5-6-7)
20%
47%
14%
10%
27%
43%
18%
8%
8%
23%
20%
20%
28%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Great Britain Canada France Germany Italy Japan Russia United States
1
43. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
43
BRIC Countries
Assess the Strength of Their Local Economy
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
% Strong (Top 3 5-6-7)
38%
28%
23%
20%
38%
61%
43%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Brazil Russia India China
4
44. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
44
Middle East/ African Countries
Assess the Strength of Their Local Economy
Rate the current state of the economy in your local area using a scale from 1 to 7,
where 7 means a very strong economy today and 1 means a very weak economy.
29%
36%
49%
56%
26%
20%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Julo2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Turkey Saudi Arabia South Africa
% Strong (Top 3 5-6-7)
2
45. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
45
Assessing the Strength of The Local
Economy…
Detailed Tables B.7
…Six Months From Now
46. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
46
Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy in the Local Area to
be Stronger in The Next Six Months…
Looking ahead 6 months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be much
stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
22%
59%
51%
45%
41%
40%
38%
33%
27%
23%
17%
17%
16%
15%
15%
15%
14%
14%
13%
12%
12%
12%
12%
10%
10%
6%
5%
3%
Total
Brazil
Saudi Arabia
India
Argentina
Mexico
China
Indonesia
Turkey
United States
Canada
South Korea
South Africa
Germany
Japan
Spain
Australia
Russia
Netherlands
Great Britain
Italy
Poland
Sweden
Hungary
Norway
Finland
Belgium
France
% Much Stronger / Somewhat Stronger
47. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
47
31%30%30%29%28%28%28%29%
27%27%28%
26%27%27%26%25%24%24%24%24%24%25%24%
26%
24%24%23%23%23%23%22%23%23%24%25%24%23%23%22%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy in the
Local Area to be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
1
Global Total
% Much Stronger / Somewhat Stronger
49. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
49
22%
41%
10%
17%
17%
16%
12%
12%
10%
40%
15%
51%
33%
27%
14%
12%
3%
45%
38%
15%
5%
23%
14%
12%
59%
15%
Total (N/C)
Argentina (+5)
Norway (+3)
Canada (+2)
South Korea (+2)
South Africa (+2)
Poland (+2)
Sweden (+2)
Hungary (+2)
Mexico (+1)
Germany (+1)
Saudi Arabia (N/C)
Indonesia (N/C)
Turkey (N/C)
Australia (N/C)
Great Britain (N/C)
France (N/C)
India (-1)
China (-1)
Spain (-1)
Belgium (-1)
United States (-2)
Russia (-2)
Italy (-3)
Brazil (-5)
Japan (-13)
Countries Ranked and Marked By Change In Assessment From Last Month
(Left Column):
Green marks countries experiencing improvement;
Blue marks countries with no change from last month;
Red marks countries experiencing a decline.
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be much stronger, somewhat
stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
50. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
50
5%
3%
2%
2%
2%
2%
2%
2%
1%
1%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
-1%
-1%
-1%
-1%
-2%
-2%
-3%
-5%
-13%
-20% -15% -10% -5% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20%
Countries Ranked by Net Improvement, Decline or No Change Compared to
Last Month:
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be much stronger, somewhat
stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
India (-1)
China (-1)
Spain (-1)
Belgium (-1)
United States (-2)
Russia (-2)
Italy (-3)
Brazil (-5)
Japan (-13)
Argentina (+5)
Norway (+3)
Canada (+2)
South Korea (+2)
South Africa (+2)
Poland (+2)
Sweden (+2)
Hungary (+2)
Mexico (+1)
Germany (+1)
Saudi Arabia (N/C)
Indonesia (N/C)
Turkey (N/C)
Australia (N/C)
Great Britain (N/C)
France (N/C)
51. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
51
All Regions - Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy in the Local Area to
be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
20%
48%
47%
19%
11%
34%
25%
20%
14%
55%
39%
38%
31%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
North America LATAM Europe APAC G-8 Countries BRIC Middle East/Africa
% Much Stronger/Somewhat Stronger
52. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
52
North American Countries - Citizen Consumers Who Say The
Economy in the Local Area to be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
31%
23%
38%
17%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
United States Canada
% Much Stronger/Somewhat Stronger
N/C
53. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
53
LATAM Countries - Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy in
the Local Area to be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
79%
59%
32%
41%
34%
40%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Brazil Argentina Mexico
% Much Stronger/Somewhat Stronger
1
54. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
54
European Countries - Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy
in the Local Area to be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
% Much Stronger/Somewhat Stronger
15%
5%
3%
28%
15%
19%
12%
18%
5%
12%
10%
22%
10%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Germany France Spain Sweden Great Britain Belgium Italy Norway Hungary Poland
1
55. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
55
APAC Countries - Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy in the
Local Area to be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
36%
14%
57%
38%
66%
45%
11%
15%
17%
14%
21%
17%
31%
33%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sep2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Australia China India Japan Russia South Korea Indonesia
% Much Stronger/Somewhat Stronger
2
56. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
56
G8 Countries - Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy in the
Local Area to be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
% Much Stronger/Somewhat Stronger
18%
12%
38%
17%
5%
3%
23%
15%
11%
15%
20%
12%
17%
14%
23%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Great Britain Canada France Germany Japan Italy Russia United States
2
57. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
57
BRIC Countries - Citizen Consumers Who Say The Economy in the
Local Area to be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
79%
59%
17%
14%
66%
45%
57%
38%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Brazil Russia India China
% Much Stronger/Somewhat Stronger
2
58. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
58
Middle East/African Countries - Citizen Consumers Who Say The
Economy in the Local Area to be Stronger in The Next Six Months
Looking ahead six months from now, do you expect the economy in your local area to be
much stronger, somewhat stronger, about the same, somewhat weaker, or much weaker than it is now?
32%
27%
44%
51%
38%
16%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
Mar2010
Apr2010
May2010
Jun2010
Jul2010
Aug2010
Sept2010
Oct2010
Nov2010
Dec2010
Jan2011
Feb2011
Mar2011
Apr2011
May2011
Jun2011
Jul2011
Aug2011
Sept2011
Oct2011
Nov2011
Dec2011
Jan2012
Feb2012
Mar2012
Apr2012
May2012
Jun2012
Jul2012
Aug2012
Sep2012
Oct2012
Nov2012
Dec2012
Jan2013
Feb2013
Mar2013
Apr2013
May2013
Jun2013
Turkey Saudi Arabia South Africa
% Much Stronger/Somewhat Stronger
N/C
59. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
59
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60. A Global @dvisory – June 2013 – G@46
The Economic Pulse
60
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