Forty - seven per
cent of respondents expect it to last less than two years, while only 14 % of people believe it can last more than four.
24 per
cent of respondents expect their travel expenditures to remain flat in 2018, down from 32 per cent the year before
A recent NAB survey indicated that nearly 80 per
cent of respondents expect inflation to stay below 4 per cent during the rest of the 1990s.
Farmers reported solid income expectations, with 73 per
cent of respondents expecting similar or improved incomes compared with 2013.
Not exact matches
Currently, more than one - third
of respondents expect inflation over the next year to be 2 — 3 per
cent or lower.
Furthermore, having surveyed some 70 housebuilders that collectively built more than 75 per
cent of all new housing in England in 2015/16, over half
of respondents expect their organisation to build more homes in the next year.
A clear, although gradual, shift has occurred in
respondents» medium - term inflation expectations, with the share
of respondents expecting inflation to be less than 3 per
cent per annum declining steadily since early last year.
The proportion
of respondents expecting inflation to be 10 per
cent or above almost halved in July, following a few months when over one - third
of survey
respondents had such an expectation.
The Melbourne Institute's «Monitoring the GST» surveys suggested that around 70 per
cent of respondents either
expected no compensation or didn't know whether they would receive any compensation.
The number
of respondents to the NAB survey anticipating inflation to be greater than 3 per
cent over the next ten years declined in the latest survey, although it remains the case that an
expected inflation rate in the 3 to 4 per
cent range is the most common survey response.
Respondents to this survey
expect inflation to decline over the following year, to a median
of 2.4 per
cent.
Averaged across all
respondents, total sales are
expected to be 2 per
cent lower than they would otherwise have been on account
of developments in Asia.
Thirty - six per
cent of our December
respondents told us they
expect to spend less on automobile purchases — up from 25 per
cent in July 2016.
Forty - five per
cent of respondents said their school does not have a policy in place to deal with parental contact out -
of - hours, meaning that many are
expected to respond to emails and texts from parents during evenings and weekends.
«In a survey
of its members conducted by SMART, 40 per
cent of respondents said they have been forced to reduce their staffing levels by one - quarter or more and
expect that number to increase to half if the ban goes into effect as planned in 2019.»
72 per
cent of respondents agreed that the floods showed the kind
of events we can
expect in future with climate change.
A further 15 per
cent don't
expect to boost compensation while seven per
cent of respondents didn't know or didn't answer.
Companies are beginning to catch up and AI is growing in use across some sectors: 38 per
cent of 10,400
respondents from 140 countries surveyed for 2017 Deloitte Human Capital Trends research said they are already using AI in their workplace, and 62 per
cent expect to do so by 2018.
In 2018, the largest proportion
of respondents (40 per
cent)
expects a pay rise
of between 3 - 6 per
cent while 18 per
cent expect an increase
of up to three per
cent.
More than half
of resource and mining employers say productivity is affected by talent shortages, and
respondents are more optimistic about next year with 88 per
cent expecting increased or stable business activity.
The seventh annual Hays Salary Guide has revealed a 19 per
cent spike in confidence for a strengthening Canadian economy next year and nearly two - thirds
of respondents expect their business activity will increase.
Where 37 per
cent of respondents say permanent staffing levels increased in 2014, nearly half (47 %)
expect to increase permanent headcount in 2015.
The largest proportion
of candidate
respondents in Singapore (36 per
cent)
expect a pay rise
of more than six per
cent while 30 per
cent expect a salary increase
of between 3 to 6 per
cent.
The report says corporate executives and entrepreneurs are
expected to be the most active investors, representing 25 per
cent and 19 per
cent of respondents respectively.