Around one in eight Britons (13%) rate the state of the economy as good while 87% describe it as bad according to new research from Ipsos’ Global @dvisor online survey conducted in 24 countries.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 28: The economic pulse of the world: January 2012Ipsos UK
Nine in ten Britons (92%) describe our economy as being in a bad situation according to the latest Ipsos Global @dvisor conducted online in 24 countries around the world.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 34: The economic pulse of the world July 2012Ipsos UK
Though the world’s attention has turned to London and the Olympic Games, bad economic news continue to emanate from the UK and Europe. Ipsos MORI’s latest poll of 24 countries shows that just one in nine (11%) Europeans expect their local economy to be stronger in the next six months. This has fallen from 20% in April 2010. Meanwhile three in ten (28%) expect their economy to be weaker while six in ten (60%) expect it to be much the same as it is now.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 33: The economic pulse of the world June 2012Ipsos UK
As the G20 meets in Mexico with the continuing crisis in Europe dominating the agenda, a new poll from Ipsos MORI’s global @dvisor shows that just 12% of citizens from across 9 European countries (Germany, France, Spain, Sweden, Great Britain, Belgium, Italy Hungary and Poland) expect their local economy to improve in the next six months. This has fallen from 20% in April 2010.
Ipsos Global @dvisory: The Economic Pulse of the World G@41 February 2013Ipsos in North America
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The slides explain why pulses production in India stagnant over the years and how we can overcome the supply side bottlenecks to meet the growing demand by 2020 and 2015.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 30: The economic pulse of the world: March 2012Ipsos UK
One in ten (10%) Britons rate the state of the economy as good, the same as in Japan and similar to French and Italian pessimism according to new research from Ipsos’ Global @dvisor online survey conducted in 24 countries.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 28: The economic pulse of the world: January 2012Ipsos UK
Nine in ten Britons (92%) describe our economy as being in a bad situation according to the latest Ipsos Global @dvisor conducted online in 24 countries around the world.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 34: The economic pulse of the world July 2012Ipsos UK
Though the world’s attention has turned to London and the Olympic Games, bad economic news continue to emanate from the UK and Europe. Ipsos MORI’s latest poll of 24 countries shows that just one in nine (11%) Europeans expect their local economy to be stronger in the next six months. This has fallen from 20% in April 2010. Meanwhile three in ten (28%) expect their economy to be weaker while six in ten (60%) expect it to be much the same as it is now.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 33: The economic pulse of the world June 2012Ipsos UK
As the G20 meets in Mexico with the continuing crisis in Europe dominating the agenda, a new poll from Ipsos MORI’s global @dvisor shows that just 12% of citizens from across 9 European countries (Germany, France, Spain, Sweden, Great Britain, Belgium, Italy Hungary and Poland) expect their local economy to improve in the next six months. This has fallen from 20% in April 2010.
Ipsos Global @dvisory: The Economic Pulse of the World G@41 February 2013Ipsos in North America
The report, titled "Ipsos Global @dvisory: The Economic Pulse of the World" is based on 18,007 recent interviews in 24 countries around the world. The report examines citizens' assessment of current state of their country's economy for a total global perspective.
The slides explain why pulses production in India stagnant over the years and how we can overcome the supply side bottlenecks to meet the growing demand by 2020 and 2015.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 30: The economic pulse of the world: March 2012Ipsos UK
One in ten (10%) Britons rate the state of the economy as good, the same as in Japan and similar to French and Italian pessimism according to new research from Ipsos’ Global @dvisor online survey conducted in 24 countries.
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.
Ipsos Global @dvisor 40: The economic pulse of the world: January 2013Ipsos UK
Europe is divided between those who see their economy as “strong”, and those who do not, with Britain firmly in the latter camp. The latest Ipsos Global @dvisor released by Ipsos MORI finds Germans are around 5 times more positive about their economy than we Britons are about ours.
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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.
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role of women and girls in various terror groupssadiakorobi2
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हम आग्रह करते हैं कि जो भी सत्ता में आए, वह संविधान का पालन करे, उसकी रक्षा करे और उसे बनाए रखे।" प्रस्ताव में कुल तीन प्रमुख हस्तक्षेप और उनके तंत्र भी प्रस्तुत किए गए। पहला हस्तक्षेप स्वतंत्र मीडिया को प्रोत्साहित करके, वास्तविकता पर आधारित काउंटर नैरेटिव का निर्माण करके और सत्तारूढ़ सरकार द्वारा नियोजित मनोवैज्ञानिक हेरफेर की रणनीति का मुकाबला करके लोगों द्वारा निर्धारित कथा को बनाए रखना और उस पर कार्यकरना था।
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Ipsos Global @dvisor 29: The economic pulse of the world: February 2012
1. Global @dvisor
Global @d isor
The Economic Pulse of the World
Citizens in 24 Countries Assess the Current State of their
Country’s Economy for a Total Global Perspective
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29
The Economic Pulse
2. These are the findings of the Global @dvisor Wave 29 (G@29),
an Ipsos survey conducted between January 3rd and January 16th, 2012.
SURVEY METHOD COUNTRIES SAMPLE WEIGHTING
• The survey instrument is • The countries reporting herein • For the results of the survey • Weighting was then employed
conducted monthly in 24 are Argentina, Australia, presented herein, an to balance demographics and
countries around the world via Belgium, Brazil, Canada, international sample of 18,768 ensure that the sample's
the Ipsos Online Panel system. China, France, Germany, adults age 18-64 in the US and composition reflects that of the
• This month fielding also took Great Britain Hong Kong
Britain, Kong, Canada,
Canada and age 16-64 in all
16 64 adult population according to
place in Hong Kong. Hungary, India, Indonesia, other countries, were the most recent country
Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, interviewed. Approximately Census data, and to provide
Russia, Saudi Arabia, South 1000+ individuals participated results intended to
Africa, South Korea, Spain, on a country by country basis approximate the sample
Sweden, Turkey and the via the Ipsos Online Panel with universe. A survey with an
United States of America.
America the exception of Argentina,
Argentina unweighted probability sample
Belgium, Hong Kong, of this size and a 100%
Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, response rate would have an
Russia, Saudi Arabia, South estimated margin of error of +/-
Africa, South Korea, Sweden 3.1 percentage points for a
and Turkey, where each have sample of 1,000 and an
a sample approximately 500+.
500+ estimated margin of error of +/
+/-
4.5 percentage points 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. All sample surveys and
ll d l d
polls may be subject to other
sources of error, including, but
not limited to coverage error,
and measurement error.
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 2
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:
The
Th currently perceived macroeconomic state of
tl i d i t t f
the respondent’s country:
• 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 state of the 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 econom toda and 1 means a very weak econom
here er economy today er eak economy.
A six month outlook for 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 Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 3
The Economic Pulse
4. SUMMARY
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 4
The Economic Pulse
5. Summary…
A break in the clouds: national economic assessments are up on the global
aggregate level and in every region. Whilethe one-point shift represents a
continuation of the up one point, down one point pattern for the global aggregate, this
is th fi t ti
i the first time since A il 2010 that all geographic regions show an
i April th t ll hi i h
improvement.
The Middle East and Africa is the geographic region with the highest aggregate
assessment (+2 to 61%), followed by Latin America (+1 to 47%), North America (+1 to
43%), Asia Pacific (+1 to 43%) and Europe (+2 to 25%).
– Europe,
Europe which consistently weighs down the global average, has not seen such an
average
improvement in its assessment since February 2011. In fact, all European countries except
Sweden (-2 to 72%) show an improvement this wave.
– Germany rose nine points to 70% this sounding, recovering its place in the top tier of the
global rankings. It has been rising steadily since June 2010.
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 5
The Economic Pulse
6. Summary…
A break in the clouds: national economic assessments are up on the global
aggregate level and in every region. Whilethe one-point shift represents a
continuation of the up one point, down one point pattern for the global aggregate, this
is th fi t ti
i the first time since A il 2010 that all geographic regions show an
i April th t ll hi i h
improvement.
The Middle East and Africa is the geographic region with the highest aggregate
assessment (+2 to 61%), followed by Latin America (+1 to 47%), North America (+1 to
43%), Asia Pacific (+1 to 43%) and Europe (+2 to 25%).
– Europe,
Europe which consistently weighs down the global average, has not seen such an
average
improvement in its assessment since February 2011. In fact, all European countries except
Sweden (-2 to 72%) show an improvement this wave.
– Germany rose nine points to 70% this sounding, recovering its place in the top tier of the
global rankings. It has been rising steadily since June 2010.
– Argentina is the only other country to show such stable upward movements in its assessment;
it moved up three points to 55% this wave and has been improving steadily since March 2010.
The upbeat mood is present both in current national assessments and in
assessments of the future of local economies. The proportion of those expecting
their local economies to be ‘stronger’ ( to 25%) in the next six months has risen one
g (+1 %)
point and all regions have improved or remained the same on this measure.
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 6
The Economic Pulse
7. Hong Kong
Polling this wave includes results from Hong Kong*. It ranks middle of the pack on
national (50%) and local (33%) assessments but near the bottom on future
assessments of local economic conditions (14%) and ranks considerably lower than
Mainland China on all three measures:
Hong Kong vs. China
NATIONAL: China 64%
Hong Kong 50%
LOCAL: China 52%
Hong Kong 33%
FUTURE OUTLOOK: China 39%
Hong Kong 14%
*The results from Hong Kong are not included in aggregate reporting in order to provide
accurate month-to-month tracking. Hong Kong is not regularly tracked.
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 7
The Economic Pulse
8. A Look at Latin America
Latin America includes some of the world’s strongest emerging markets: Argentina, Brazil and Mexico.
Argentina ( to 55%) demonstrates steady, p
g (+3 ) y positive improvement since July 2010, when it sat at 34%.
p y
For Brazil (+6 to 62%), 2010 was tumultuous but it has been on an upward curve since June 2011
(51%). Argentina and Brazil trumps the global aggregate assessment of national economies each
month consistently since January 2011. Mexico has been considerably more volatile, with periods of
drops and j p This wave, Mexico is the country with the g
p jumps. y greatest decline ( points to 24%) among
(-6 p ) g
all those surveyed.
70%
60% 62%
60%
55%
50%
38% 39%
40%
30% 25%
20% 24%
20%
10%
0%
Apr-10
Jun-10
Jul-10
Aug-10
Sept-10
Oct-10
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
Feb-11
Mar-11
Apr-11
Jun-11
Jul-11
Aug-11
Sept-11
Oct-11
Nov-11
Dec-11
Jan-12
May-10
May-11
S
S
Brazil Argentina Mexico GLOBAL AGGREGATE
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 8
The Economic Pulse
9. THE WORLD at a GLANCE
THE
WORLD
at a
GLANCE
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 9
The Economic Pulse
10. Global Average of National Economic Assessment (39%)
up one point
The average global economic assessment of national economies has been
fluctuating up one point, down one point, steadily like a pendulum for the past six
months – this sounding it is up one point (39%).
Saudi Arabia again shows the strongest proportions of people rating their current
national economic situation as ‘good’ (86%) a figure that is unchanged this month
good (86%), month.
They are followed by: Sweden (-2 points to 72%), Australia (+2 to 70%), Germany
(+9 to 70%), Canada (+2 to 65%) and India (-3 to 65%).
On the other end, only 2% (no change since last wave) of those in Hungary rate their
national economies as ‘good’, followed by Spain (NC at 4%), Italy (NC at 5%), France
(+1 to 6%), Japan (NC at 8%) and Great Britain (+5 to 13%).
Countries with the greatest improvements: South Africa (+10 to 42%), China (+9 to
64%), Germany (+9 to 70%) and Brazil (+6 to 62%).
Countries with the greatest d li
C i ih h declines: M i ( 6 to 24%) S h K
Mexico (-6 24%), South Korea ( 4 to 1 %)
(-4 17%),
India (-3 to 65%) and Turkey (-3 to 55%).
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 10
The Economic Pulse
11. Global Average of Local Economic Assessment (29%)
Unchanged
The global average of local economic assessment among the 24 countries remains
unchanged for four months with three in ten (29%) global citizens who agree the
state of the current economy in their local area is “good”.
The poll finds assessments of local economies to be strongest in Saudi Arabia (+5
points to 69%), a country that exceeds the second-place rival by 17 points That
69%) second place points.
country is China (+4 to 52%), followed next by Brazil (+4 to 50%), Sweden (+1 to
49%), Australia (NC at 47%) and India (-1 to 47%).
Spain (NC at 6%), Japan (+2 to 7%), Hungary (+1 to 8%), Italy (NC at 10%), France
(NC at 12%) and South Korea (-5 to 12%) sit at the bottom of the global ranking.
Countries with the greatest improvements: Saudi Arabia (+5 to 69%) China (+4 to
69%),
52%), Germany (+4 to 45%) and Brazil (+4 to 50%).
Countries with the greatest declines: Turkey (-10 to 35%), South Korea (-5 to 12%)
and I d
d Indonesia ( 2 to 31%)
i (-2 31%).
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 11
The Economic Pulse
12. Global Average of Future Outlook for Local Economy Up
One Point: 25%
Citizens are asked to provide their assessments on the extent to which they think
their local economy will be “stronger”, “weaker” or “about the same” six months from
now. Currently, a global average of one quarter (25%) believe their local economy
will be stronger, a one-point improvement after five months of stagnation.
Brazil holds on to its number one spot on this measurement (+3 points to 74%)
74%),
followed by Saudi Arabia (+3 to 63%), India (NC at 50%), Argentina (-3 to 42%) and
China (+7 to 39%).
France sits in last place on this measure with only 2% expecting their local
economies would be stronger, unchanged from last sounding. Also at the bottom of
the ranking sit Hungary ( +2 to 5%), Belgium (+1 to 6%), Japan (+1 to 8%), Great
Britain (+3 to 10%) and South Korea (-1 to 11%)
( 1 11%).
Countries with the greatest improvements: China (+7 to 39%), Germany (+5 to 18%)
and Sweden (+4 to 16%).
Countries with the greatest declines: Indonesia (-5 to 32%), Turkey (-4 to 31%),
Mexico (-3 to 36%), Argentina (-3 to 42%) and Spain (-3 to 18%).
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 12
The Economic Pulse
13. 1. National Economic Assessments: Countries at
a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
Those Countries Where the Country Economic Assessment…
is has experienced an has experienced a is
HIGHEST IMPROVEMENT DECLINE LOWEST
this month since last sounding since last sounding this month
Saudi Arabia 86% South Africa 10 Mexico 6 Hungary 2%
Sweden 72% China 9 South Korea 4 Spain 4%
Australia 70% Germany 9 India 3 Italy 5%
Germany 70% Brazil 6 Turkey 3 France 6%
Canada 65% Great Britain 5 Sweden 2 Japan 8%
India 65% Argentina 3 Indonesia 1 Great Britain 13%
China 64% Belgium 3 South Korea 17%
Brazil 62% Canada 2 United States 21%
Australia 2 Belgium 22%
France 1 Mexico 24%
Poland 27%
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?
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 13
The Economic Pulse
14. 1. National Economic Assessment: Regions at
a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
CHANGE
REGION NET
(since last
(in descending order by NET) ‘Good’
sounding)
Middle East/Africa 61% 2%
BRIC 55% 3%
LATAM 47% 1%
North America (Can/US) 43% 1%
APAC 43% 1%
G8 27% 2%
Europe 25% 2%
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?
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 14
The Economic Pulse
15. 2. Local Economic Assessment: Countries at
a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
Those Countries Where the Local Area Economic Assessment…
is has experienced an has experienced a is
HIGHEST IMPROVEMENT DECLINE LOWEST
this month since last sounding since last sounding this month
Saudi Arabia 69% Saudi Arabia 5 Turkey 10 Spain 6%
China 52% China 4 South Korea 5 Japan 7%
Brazil 50% Germany 4 Indonesia 2 Hungary 8%
Sweden 49% Brazil 4 United States 1 Italy 10%
Australia 47% South Africa 3 India 1 South Korea 12%
India 47% Poland 3 France 12%
Canada 45% Great Britain 3 Belgium 15%
Germany 45% Japan 2 Great Britain 16%
Russia 2 Russia 21%
Sweden
S d 1 United St t
U it d States 22%
Hungary 1 Mexico 22%
Belgium 1 Poland 24%
Argentina
A ti 1 South Af i
S th Africa 26%
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
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 15
The Economic Pulse
16. 2. Local Economic Assessment: Regions at
a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
REGION NET CHANGE
(in descending order by NET) ‘Strong’ (since last sounding)
Top 3 Box (5-6-7)
Middle East/Africa 43% 1%
BRIC 42% 2%
LATAM 36% 2%
North America 33% 1%
APAC 31% N/C
G-8 Countries 22% 1%
Europe
E 21% 2%
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 A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 16
The Economic Pulse
17. 3. Six Month Outlook on the Local Economy: Countries
at a Glance Compared to the Last Wave…
Countries where the Assessment of the Local Economic Strengthening …
is has experienced an
p has experienced a
p is
HIGHEST IMPROVEMENT DECLINE LOWEST
this month since last sounding since last sounding this month
Brazil 74% China 7 Indonesia 5 France 2%
Saudi Arabia 63% Germany 5 Turkey 4 Hungary 5%
India 50% Sweden 4 Mexico 3 Belgium 6%
Argentina 42% Brazil 3 Argentina 3 Japan 8%
China 39% Saudi Arabia 3 Spain 3 Great Britain 10%
Mexico 36% United States 3 South Korea 1 South Korea 11%
Indonesia 32% Australia 3 Italy 15%
Italy
It l 3 Sweden
S d 16%
Great Britain 3 South Africa 16%
Russia 2 Poland 16%
Hungary 2
Canada 2
Japan 1
Belgium 1
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 Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 17
The Economic Pulse
18. 3. Six Month Outlook on Local Economy: Regions at
a Glance Compared to Last Wave…
REGION NET CHANGE
(in descending order by NET) ‘Stronger’ (since last sounding)
LATAM 51% N/C
BRIC 45% 3%
Middle East/Africa 37% N/C
APAC 25% 1%
North America 23% 2%
G-8 Countries 15% 3%
Europe
E 12% 2%
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 Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 18
The Economic Pulse
19. DETAILED FINDINGS
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 19
The Economic Pulse
20. Assessing The Current Economic
Situation
Sit ti …
…in Their Country
y
Detailed Tables B.3
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 20
The Economic Pulse
21. Global Citizens Assess the Current Economic Situation in their
Country as “Good”
‘Very Good / Somewhat Good’
Total 39%
Saudi Arabia 86%
Sweden 72%
Australia 70%
Germany 70%
Canada 65%
India 65%
China
Chi 64%
Brazil 62%
Argentina 55%
Turkey 55%
Hong Kong
g g 50%
Indonesia 45%
South Africa 42%
Russia 30%
Poland 27%
Mexico 24%
Belgium 22%
United States 21%
South Korea 17%
Great Britain 13%
Japan 8%
France 6%
Italy 5%
Spain 4%
Hungary 2%
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?
*Note that results for Hong Kong are not included in aggregate results to allow for consistent tracking. A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 21
The Economic Pulse
22. Global Average Tracked - Global Citizens Assess the Current
Economic Situation in their Country as “Good”:… 1
Total Good
70%
60% 56% 55%
50% 45%
42% 41% 41%
40% 41% 40% 40% 41% 40% 41% 40% 40%
38% 37% 38% 39% 39% 38% 38% 39% 38% 39% 38% 39%
40% 32%
29%
30%
20%
10%
0%
Dec/10
Dec/11
Apr/07
Oct/07
Apr/08
Apr/09
Mar/10
Apr/10
Jun/10
Jul/10
Aug/10
Sept/10
Feb/11
Jun/11
Aug/11
Oct/10
Jan/11
Mar/11
Apr/11
Jul/11
Sept/11
Oct/11
Jan/12
Nov/08
v/Jan/10
Nov/10
Nov/11
May/10
May/11
S
S
Nov
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?
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 22
The Economic Pulse
24. 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
Totoal (+1) 39%
South Africa (+10) 42%
China (+9) 64%
Germany (+9) 70%
Brazil (+6) 62%
Great Britain (+5) 13%
Argentina (+3) 55%
Belgium (+3) 22%
Canada (+2) 65%
Australia (+2) 70%
France (+1) 6%
Hungary (N/C) 2%
Italy (N/C) 5% Green marks countries experiencing improvement;
Japan (N/C) 8% Blue marks countries with no change from last month;
Poland (N/C) 27% Red marks countries experiencing a decline…
Russia (N/C) 30%
Saudi Arabia (N/C) 86%
Spain (N/C) 4%
United States (N/C) 21%
Indonesia (-1) 45%
Sweden (-2) 72%
Turkey (-3) 55%
India (-3) 65%
South K
S th Korea ( 4)
(-4) 17%
Mexico (-6) 24%
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 24
The Economic Pulse
25. 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?
-15% -10% -5% 0% 5% 10% 15%
South Africa (+10) 10%
China (+9) 9%
Germany (+9) 9%
Brazil (+6) 6%
Great Britain (+5) 5%
Argentina (+3) 3%
Belgium (+3) 3%
Canada (+2) 2%
Australia (+2) 2%
France (+1) 1%
Hungary (N/C) 0%
Italy (N/C) 0%
Japan (N/C) 0%
Poland (N/C) 0%
Russia (N/C) 0%
Saudi Arabia (N/C) 0%
Spain (N/C) 0%
United States (N/C) 0%
-1% Indonesia (-1)
-2% Sweden (-2)
-3% Turkey (-3)
-3% India (-3)
-4%
4% South Korea (-4)
-6% Mexico (-6)
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 25
The Economic Pulse
26. Assessing the Current Economic Situation by All Regions:
Current Tracked Status:
‘Very Good / Somewhat Good’
80%
71%
70%
64%
61%
60%
61% 55%
51%
50% 47%
45%
40% 43%
30% 27%
25%
20%
10%
07
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
11
11
07
08
09
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
12
08
10
10
11
11
Oct/0
Mar/1
Jun/1
Aug/1
Oct/1
Dec/1
Feb/1
Mar/1
Jun/1
Aug/1
Oct/1
Dec/1
Apr/0
Apr/0
Apr/0
Nov/Jan/1
Apr/1
Jul/1
Sept/1
Jan/1
Apr/1
Jul/1
Sept/1
Jan/1
Nov/0
May/1
Nov/1
May/1
Nov/1
North America (Can/US) LATAM Europe APAC G8 BRIC Middle East/Africa
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?
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 26
The Economic Pulse
27. North American (Canada/US) Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation 1
‘Very Good / Somewhat Good’
100%
90%
80%
80%
70% 65%
60%
47%
50%
40%
30%
21%
20%
10%
0%
10
10
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
07
07
08
08
09
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
12
11
Sept 201
Dec 201
Jan 201
Mar/1
Apr/1
Jun/1
Jul/1
Aug/1
Oct/1
Dec/1
Apr 200
Oct 200
Apr 200
Nov 200
Apr 200
Nov/Jan 201
Mar 201
Apr 201
May 201
Jun 201
Jul 201
Aug 201
Oct 201
Nov 201
Feb 201
Sept/1
Nov/1
Jan/1
May/1
United States Canada
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?
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 27
The Economic Pulse
28. LATAM Countries
Assessing the Current Economic Situation 1
‘Very Good / Somewhat Good’
80%
70%
62%
60%
50%
50% 55%
42%
40%
30%
24%
20%
10%
0%
07
07
08
09
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
11
12
08
10
11
10
11
Apr-0
Oct-0
Apr-0
Apr-0
Nov-09/Jan-1
Mar-1
Apr-1
Jun-1
Jul-1
Aug-1
Sept-1
Oct-1
Dec-1
Jan-1
Feb-1
Mar-1
Apr-1
Jun-1
Jul-1
Aug-1
Sept-1
Oct-1
Dec-1
Jan-1
Nov-0
Nov-1
Nov-1
May-1
May-1
Brazil Argentina Mexico
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?
A Global @dvisory – February 2012 – G@29 28
The Economic Pulse