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- From: Bill.Goffe@usm.edu (Bill Goffe)
- Newsgroups: usm.test.unmoderated,sci.econ,sci.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Econ. Resources on the Internet [4 of 20]
- Supersedes: <econ-resources-faq-4-939499420@cook.cba.usm.edu>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 10 Nov 1999 23:27:25 -0000
- Organization: American Economic Association
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- Reply-To: Bill.Goffe@usm.edu (Bill Goffe)
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- Summary: This document contains a list of resources of interest
- to economists. It should be of interest to anyone looking
- for economic and related information.
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu sci.econ:112409 sci.answers:10833 news.answers:170815
-
- Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3 (Perl 5.005)
- Archive-name: econ-resources-faq/part4
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- Sci-econ-research-archive-name: econ-resources-faq/
- Last-modified 1999/09/30
- Version: vol. 4 no. 2
- Url: http://rfe.org
-
- Resources for Economists on the Internet, Vol. 4, No. 2, September, 1999
-
- Editor: Bill Goffe <Bill.Goffe@usm.edu>
- Editorial Assistant: Elise Braden <elise@econlit.org>
-
- Part 4 of 20
-
- This guide, sponsored by the American Economic Association, lists
- more than 1,000 resources on the Internet of interest to academic and
- practicing economists, and those interested in economics. Almost all
- resources are also described.
-
- Resources for Economists on the Internet (RFE) is a copyrighted work
- of the American Economic Association (the "AEA"). Permission to make
- digital, electronic or hard copies of part or all of RFE for personal
- or classroom use, Usenet distribution, or mailing lists is granted,
- provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or direct
- commercial advantage and that whole copies show the following notice:
-
- "Resources for Economists on the Internet (RFE), Copyright 1999
- American Economic Association"
-
- Otherwise the AEA owns the exclusive right to print, publish,
- distribute, reproduce, sell, prepare derivative works, transmit,
- download, or otherwise transfer copies of RFE. Copyrights of
- components of this work owned by others than the AEA must be honored
- and attributed to the rightful owner. Abstracting and short quotes
- are permitted. To copy otherwise or to republish otherwise, including
- on web pages, in whole or in part requires prior specific permission.
- Permissions may be requested from the American Economic Association,
- 2014 Broadway, Suite 305, Nashville, TN 37203, or via E-mail:
- aeainfo@ctrvax.vanderbilt.edu. RFE is provided without any express
- or implied warranty.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- For distribution via Usenet, this FAQ is split into 20 parts as large
- files don't travel well on Usenet. For other locations of this guide,
- see the section titled "1.5 Where to Obtain This Guide" in part 2.
-
-
- 2.2.0 Other U.S. Data
-
- 2.2.1 B&E Data Links
-
- [ASA list of 300 useful data sites]
-
- This site is sponsored by the Business and Economic Statistics (B&E)
- Section of the American Statistical Association (ASA). It lists more
- than 300 sites "of interest to economists and business statisticians.
- " Sites are rated for their quality and usefulness by users (who can
- also suggest sites). There are several ways to search for data here.
- One way is with their search engine, and another is by viewing the
- three categories they organize the data into: "Finance,"
- "Macroeconomics," and "Labor and General Microeconometrics." The
- sites and evaluations change in response to feedback from users.
-
- # http://www.econ-datalinks.org/
-
-
- 2.2.2 Data on the Net
-
- [surveys 400 social science sites]
-
- This site, at the University of California San Diego, lists a very
- large number of social science data sites (more than 400) on the
- Internet. Many of the sites contain economic data (unfortunately,
- there is little organization to the listing, so some searching will
- likely be required). It also lists some 100 data archives around the
- world, and another 100 searchable catalogs of data. Finally, they
- list about 50 data vendors and offers 149 Social Science Gateways.
-
- # http://odwin.ucsd.edu/idata/
-
-
- 2.2.3 FEDSTATS
-
- [covers 70+ different federal agencies]
-
- This site, run by the Federal Interagency Council on Statistical
- Policy, lists detailed information and provides links to more than 70
- different federal statistical agencies. Besides information on this
- site, you can search for statistical information several different
- ways -- these include a search engine (with data from these
- agencies), a listing of data via programs (including, of course,
- economic ones), and a general listing of data from A to Z. The site
- also lists contacts at the various agencies, and you can both list
- and search for press releases from 11 of the sites (which happens to
- include most of the major economic ones).
-
- # http://www.fedstats.gov/
-
-
- 2.2.4 Federal Web Locator
-
- [directory for federal government sites]
-
- This material is collected by the Villanova Center for Information
- Law and Policy. It lists and links federal government information for
- the legislative branch, the judicial branch, the executive branch
- (with departments), independent agencies, quasi-official agencies,
- and non-governmental federally-related sites, in several different
- formats.
-
- # http://www.law.vill.edu/fed-agency/
-
-
- + 2.2.5 Google -- Uncle Sam
- +
- + [subset of well-regarded Google.com search engine]
- +
- + This search engine for U.S. federal government sites is a subset of
- + Google, which has been getting good reviews for the relevance of its
- + search results. It makes very heavy use of the number of links to a
- + site to rate them. In trials for various economic data terms (both
- + obvious and non-obvious), it generally returns very useful links.
- +
- + # http://www.google.com/unclesam
-
-
- 2.2.6 GOVBOT: Database of Government Web Sites
-
- [search engine for federal government sites]
-
- This search engine specializes in U.S. government and military web
- sites. At last count, there were more than 842,000 pages in its
- database.
-
- # http://cobar.cs.umass.edu/ciirdemo/Govbot/
-
-
- 2.2.7 Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
- (ICPSR)
-
- [leading U.S. social science archive]
-
- This organization offers a substantial amount of social science data
- in machine readable form to its more than 600 colleges, universities,
- and institutions (data is available to individuals whose institutions
- are not members of the ICPSR). All their data is available on-line,
- and soon researchers at ICPSR institutions will be able to access it
- directly. Some data is available to non-ICPSR members.
-
- In the section of the archive titled "Economic Behavior, Attitudes"
- you will find the Consumer Expenditure Survey and the Survey of
- Consumer Finances. Other data of possible interest (in other
- sections) includes the World Bank's World Tables Of Economic And
- Social Indicators, 1950-1988; the NBER's Macroeconomic Time Series
- For The United States, United Kingdom, Germany, And France (which has
- 1.6 million entries in numerous categories including regional data;
- most data is from the early part of this century, but a substantial
- amount is from the 19th century; the most recent is from 1968); and
- United States Microdata Samples Extract File, 1940-1980: Demographics
- Of Aging (which is an extract of the Censuses of 1960, 1970, and
- 1980). In addition, there is a substantial amount of more specialized
- data of likely interest to economists.
-
- For economists, an especially useful collection of data is Class V,
- which contains data funded by the NSF's Economics Division. This data
- is in the "Publication-Related Archive" section of the archive. This
- material is available to all.
-
- The Consumer Expenditures Survey and the Current Population Survey
- are available through their "FastTrack Service" (which makes data
- available before their usual testing and checking). Information on
- FastTrack datasets is available from their comprehensive list of
- resources on their main web page. The data itself is available on
- their ftp site in the "pub/FastTrack" directory. This material is
- available to all.
-
- To obtain most data from ICPSR, you generally must contact your local
- representative, assuming that your university or college is a member
- of the ICPSR.
-
- # http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/
- # gopher://gopher.icpsr.umich.edu:70/1/
- # ftp://ftp.icpsr.umich.edu
- # Information: <ICPSR_Netmail@um.cc.umich.edu>
-
-
- 2.2.8 National Archives Center for Electronic Records
-
- [long-term storage of records]
-
- The National Archives has a branch devoted to the storage of
- electronic records from many federal entities, which now contains
- over 30,000 files. Of interest to economists are records from the
- Bureaus of the Census, Economic Analysis, and Labor Statistics, the
- Civil Aeronautics Board, Department of Transportation, IRS, SEC, and
- Social Security Administration. In general, records cannot be
- accessed online via the Internet, however, detailed information about
- them, including a listing of "data files" and ordering information
- for the data files (available either on tape or CD-ROM).
-
- # http://www.nara.gov/nara/electronic/
-
-
- 2.2.9 Statistical Resources on the Web (Univ. of Michigan)
-
- [very wide-ranging]
-
- This very wide ranging listing describes where a multitude of data
- sets can be found on the Internet. While there is little additional
- economic data beyond what is covered here, there is a wealth of other
- data -- everything from agriculture to weather (26 categories in
- all).
-
- # http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Documents.center/stats.html
-
-
- 2.2.10 U.S. Census Bureau
-
- [great wealth of information]
-
- The Census offers a great wealth of data. It is tempting, and in fact
- accurate to say, that if you think it is at all possible that the
- data is produced by the Census, check here -- you're likely to find
- it. The material is a mix of general interest material (I've even
- used some for my principles classes) and highly detailed information.
-
- The "News" category includes news releases, tipsheets, fact sheets,
- Census briefs, and the "Census and You" monthly newsletter. It also
- has a section titled "Ask the Expert," where you can ask find contact
- information of different Census functions.
-
- The "Search" category includes many different ways of searching this
- site and material on it. This includes words in on-line Census
- documents, searching by place that Census reports on, and searching
- for Census staff members. You can even search via a map, from which
- you can choose the geographical area you're interested in, and then
- view summary information about that area. You can proceed to the
- country level, and it provides a wealth of interesting and
- easy-to-find information.
-
- "Access Tools" includes software that works over the net, such as
- "Map Stats" (which profiles information from states and counties (the
- same as map searching described above); the "Tiger" map system for
- generating maps on the fly; "1990 Census Lookup" (you can extract
- files from a given Census); a gazetteer for the U.S. (which also
- performs lookups); "FERRET" (Federal Electronic Research and Review
- Tool) for extracting data; and "MABLE/Geocorr," which accesses MABLE
- geographic database and generates correlation lists as reports or
- files. This section also includes software you can download, and
- Census access tools at other sites.
-
- The "CenStats and "CenStore" section lists various products.
- "CenStats" is an fee-based Internet service for statistical data.
- "CenStore" has information on various products, such as tapes,
- CD-ROMS, diskettes, publications, and maps. You can purchase all
- documents generated by Census after January, 1996 in electronic form.
-
- Most material is in the section titled "Subjects A-Z" (only 2 letters
- have no entry). The slightly edited entries are:
-
- A: Abbreviation and Acronym Glossary, Acquisition Information,
- Advance Monthly Retail Sales, Advisory Committees, Age, Age Search,
- Aging, Agriculture, Alaska Native, American Community Survey,
- American Indian, Ancestry, Annual Research Conference, Apportionment,
- Asian, and Assets.
-
- B: Birthplace, Births, Black-Owned Businesses, Black Population,
- Building Permits, and Business (Customized Tabulations, Databases,
- Enterprises, General, Inventories, Owners, Totals by County, Reports,
- and FAQ)
-
- C: Calendars, Capital Assets, Capital Expenditures, CD-ROMs, Census
- Briefs, Census Catalog and Guide, CenStats, CenStore, Census 2000,
- Census & You, Census Bureau, Census Tract Coding Resources, Children,
- Citizenship, City/County Governments, College Enrollment, Commodity
- Flow, Commodity Input/Exports Related to Output, Communication
- Services, Communications, Commuting, Companies, Computer Ownership
- and Use, Conferences, Congressional Affairs, Congressional Districts,
- Consolidated Federal Funds Report, Construction (Current Reports,
- Industry Series, and Statistics), Continuous Measurement, Contracts,
- County Business Patterns, County & City Data Book, County Profiles,
- Crops, Current Industrial Reports (CIRs), Current Population Survey
- (CPS), and Customer Liaison Office.
-
- D: Data Capture Services Contract, Data Developments, Data Extraction
- System, Deaths, Decennial Census (2000, 1990, Historical, and Report
- to Congress -- The Plan for Census 2000), Demographic and Social
- Characteristics, Demographic Business Characteristics, Disability,
- Divorces, and Durable Goods Orders.
-
- E: Economic Census, Economic Indicator Releases Schedule, Economic
- Indicators, Economic Statistics Briefing Room, Education, Education
- Finances, Elderly, Electronic Data Product Support - TechTalk:,
- Elected Officials, Electronic Subscription Service,
- Employee-Retirement Systems, Employment (General/Public and
- Opportunities (Census Bureau)), Empowerment Contracting Resources,
- Enterprises, Entrepreneurs, Establishment and Firm Size, Estimates
- (1996 Estimates of the Population of Cities, Places, and MCDs Housing
- Units & Households, Income, Persons, and Poverty), Expenditures,
- Exports, and Extract Software for CD-ROM.
-
- F: Families, Farms, Federal Depository Libraries, Federal
- Expenditures, Federal Government Data, Federal-State Cooperative
- Program, Federal Statistics Briefing Room, FEDSTATS Fellowship
- Opportunities, Fertility, Finance (Insurance & Real Estate), Finances
- of Governments and Schools, Fishing, Foreign Born, and Foreign Trade.
-
- G: Gazetteer (U.S.), Genealogy, Geographic (Area Profiles, Mobility,
- Services & Information), Glossary of Abbreviations and Acronyms,
- Governmental Interactions Calendar, and Governments.
-
- H: Health Insurance, Health Statistics, Hispanic Origin,
- Hispanic-Owned Businesses, Homeownership, Hotels (Motels and Other
- Lodging Places), Households and Families -- CPS Households and
- Families Projections, Household and Housing Unit Estimates, Housing
- (Characteristics, Completions, Inventory Change, Houses Sold, Housing
- Starts, Press Releases Starts, and Statistics), and Hunting.
-
- I: Immigration, Imports, Income, Indicators - Economic, Industries
- Statistics, Insurance, International (Statistics and Trade),
- Irrigation, Inventories (Business), and ITPlans.
-
- J: Journey to Work.
-
- L: Labor Force, Land, Language Use, Livestock, Living Arrangements,
- Local Retirement Systems, and Lodging Places.
-
- M: Manufacturing, Manufacturing Financial Report, Maps, Marital
- Status, Market Value of Agricultural Products, Marriage, Merchandise
- Line Sales, Metropolitan Areas, Migration, Mining, Minority-Owned
- Businesses, Mobility/Movers, Money Income, Monthly Retail Sales,
- Monthly Wholesale Trade, Motels, and Motor Freight.
-
- N: Native American Population, Nativity, NAICS (North American
- Industry Classification System), New on Site, and Nonemployer
- Statistics (Retail and Services).
-
- O: Occupation, Other Official Statistics/FedStats, Other Topics, and
- Outlying Areas (Economic).
-
- P: Pacific Islander Population, PDFPublications, Place of Birth,
- Place of Work, Population (1996 Estimates of the Population of
- Cities, Places, and MCDs (Characteristics, Density, Estimates, P-20,
- P-23, Profile, Projections, and Topics)), Poverty, Press Releases,
- Previous Residence, Prices and Inflation, Procurement Activities,
- Product Profiles, Product Shipments, Program Participation, Public
- Finance and Employment, Publications, and Puerto Rico.
-
- Q: Quarterly Financial Report (Manufacturing, Mining, and Trade
- Corporations).
-
- R: Race, Radio Broadcasts, Ranches, Real Estate, Recreation,
- Redistricting Data Program, References, Regional Offices of Census
- Bureau, Report to Congress (revised August 1997), Residential
- Construction, Residential Improvements, Retail (Monthly Retail Sales,
- Retail Trade, Retail Trade for Outlying Areas, and Sales and
- Inventories -- Retail), and Rural/Urban.
-
- S: Sales and Inventories -- Retail, Sales and Inventories --
- Wholesale, School (Characteristics of Students, Enrollment -
- Including College, Finances, Public Education Finances, and Schools),
- Service Annual Survey, Service Industries, Service Industries for
- Outlying Areas, Shipments (Inventories, & Orders), SIC Codes
- (Standard Industrial Classification), Small Area Income and Poverty
- Estimates, Small Business, Solicitations, Sources of Receipts,
- Sources of Revenue, State Data Centers, State Government, State
- Profiles, State Retirement Systems, Statistical Abstract, Statistical
- Agencies (Federal and International), Statistical Briefs See also:
- Census Brief, Statistical Research Report Series, Subject Index to
- Population Reports, Subscription Service, Survey of Income and
- Program Participation (SIPP), and Surveys.
-
- T: Taxes (Quarterly Tax Revenues (by state and local governments),
- State Tax Collection, and Taxable Property Values), TechTalk
- (Electronic Data Product Support), TIGER, Trade (Goods and Services,
- Trade and Employment, Trade Balance, Trade Corporations Financial
- Report, International, and with U.S. Possessions), Transportation,
- Travel to Work, and Truck.
-
- U: Urban/Rural, U.S. Exports and Imports, U.S. Gazetteer, U.S.
- Merchandise Trade, U.S. Possessions - Trade, U.S. Trade with Puerto
- Rico, and Utilities.
-
- V: Vacancy, Value of New Construction, and Voting and Registration.
-
- W: Warehousing, We the Americans Series, Wealth, Wholesale (Monthly
- Wholesale Trade, Sales and Inventories -- Wholesale, Wholesale Trade,
- and Wholesale Trade Outlying Areas), Wildlife, Women-Owned
- Businesses, and Working Papers.
-
- Y: Year 2000.
-
- Z: ZIP Code Statistics.
-
- Finally, several miscellaneous entries provide additional
- information: "About the Bureau," "User Manual," "New on the Site,"
- "Current Economic Indicators" (with recent reports), and the current
- U.S. and world populations.
-
- # http://www.census.gov
- # ftp://ftp.census.gov
- # Information: <pio@census.gov>
-
-
- 2.2.11 Integrated Public Use Microdata Sample (IPUMS)
-
- [Census data from 1850 to 1990]
-
- To quote from their documentation on the newest version, IPUMS-98,
- "The IPUMS consists of twenty-five high-precision samples of the
- American population drawn from thirteen federal censuses. Some of
- these samples have existed for years, and others were created
- specifically for this database. The twenty-five samples, which span
- the censuses of 1850 to 1990, collectively comprise our richest
- source of quantitative information on long-term changes in the
- American population." The samples include censuses from 1850, 1860,
- 1870, 1880, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1940, 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980 and 1990;
- many are 1 percent individual samples of that census. In all, there
- are some 25 gigabytes of data on some 50 million people. On-line
- documentation is available, as is an extraction engine (more useful
- than downloading a complete sample, the smallest of which has an
- uncompressed size of 73 megabytes). Compared to past versions,
- "IPUMS-98 is a comprehensive revision of the Integrated Public Use
- Microdata Series. We have expanded the documentation threefold, added
- new datasets and variables, and revised dozens of variables."
-
- # http://www.ipums.umn.edu/
- # Information: <ipums@hist.umn.edu>
-
-
- 2.2.12 Summary U.S. Census Info at Missouri Census Data Center
-
- [summary data for cities, towns, and counties (easy to get)]
-
- At first glance, one would think that this site would be Missouri
- specific, but they have taken data from the 1990 U.S. Census and made
- it publically available in their "Basic Tables." The Center has
- "organized the 100 most frequently used social and economic variables
- from the 1990 Census of Population and Housing, Summary Tape File 3
- into a set of 14 descriptive tables in Lotus 123 format (ver.2)" and
- ASCII. Data is available for metro areas, places (which covers a very
- large number of communities), all counties, and states." The
- spreadsheet format covers a given geographical entity, such as all
- states, all counties, etc. They also offer "Basic Trends Reports,"
- which show changes from the 1980 to 1990 Census. Finally, they offer
- a "profile generator," which will generate this data from your
- geographical area of interest.
-
- # http://www.oseda.missouri.edu/usinfo.html
-
-
- 2.2.13 General Social Survey (GSS)
-
- [annual survey; broad, but some economic questions]
-
- "The GSS (General Social Survey) is an almost annual 'omnibus,'
- personal interview survey of U.S. households conducted by the
- National Opinion Research Center." The first one was run in 1972, and
- has been run almost every year since. In total, there have been some
- 35,000 respondents answering a very wide variety of questions of
- interest to social scientists. Of interest to economists are
- questions on economic policy, as well as income received.
-
- # http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/GSS/
-
-
- 2.2.14 Health and Retirement Study (HRS)
-
- The Health and Retirement Study (HRS) studies many characteristics of
- those near or in their retirement years. Specifically, it is a
- longitudinal national panel study. The baseline consists of
- interviews in 7,600 households in 1992 (respondents aged from 51 to
- 61, along with their spouses), with followups every two years for 12
- years. The data contains a wealth of economic, demographic and health
- information, which of course are generally related to retirement
- issues. The entire dataset, including errata, is available at this
- site.
-
- Besides data, this site also offers the latest information related to
- this project, material from papers using this dataset, links to
- related sites, and some useful software.
-
- Robert J. Willis, of the Institute for Social Research, University of
- Michigan, is the Principal Investigator for this project and "Asset
- and Health Dynamics Among the Oldest Old (AHEAD).
-
- # http://www.umich.edu/~hrswww/
-
-
- 2.2.15 Asset and Health Dynamics Among the Oldest Old (AHEAD)
-
- The Asset and Health Dynamics Among the Oldest Old (AHEAD) is an HRS
- Auxiliary Study, and is also known as Aging and Health in America. It
- centers on "data to address a broad range of scientific questions
- focused on the interplay of resources and late life health
- transitions." The initial sample consisted of 7,447 respondents aged
- 70+, including 2,548 aged 80 and over, plus 775 younger spouses.
- There are followups every two years. Like the HRS, data, including
- errata, is available on-line.
-
- Besides data, this site also offers the latest information related to
- this project, material from papers using this dataset, links to
- related sites, and some useful software.
-
- Robert J. Willis, of the Institute for Social Research, University of
- Michigan, is the Principal Investigator for this and for "Health and
- Retirement Study (HRS)."
-
- # http://www.umich.edu/~hrswww/
-
-
- 2.2.16 National Longitudinal Surveys (NLS) Bibliography
-
- This online version of the NLS Bibliography provides current and
- retrospective entries from previous editions and supplements. Though
- data itself is not available, the bibliography contains approximately
- 2,500 citations of NLS-based journal articles, working papers,
- conference presentations, and dissertations published from 1968 to
- 1995. Several methods of searching can be used and detailed search
- instructions are provided.
-
- # www.chrr.ohio-state.edu/nls-bib/
-
-
- 2.2.17 Panel Study on Income Dynamics (PSID)
-
- [well-known longitudinal survey of U.S. residents]
-
- The data available here is best described by their own documentation.
- To quote: "The Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) is a
- longitudinal survey of a representative sample of U.S. individuals
- (men, women, and children) and the families in which they reside. It
- has been ongoing since 1968. Data are collected annually, and the
- data files contain the full span of information collected over the
- course of the study. PSID data can be used for cross-sectional,
- longitudinal and intergenerational analyses, and for studying both
- individuals and families.
-
- "The general design and core content of the study have remained
- largely unchanged, and considerable effort has been expended cleaning
- the data. These two features greatly enhance the PSID's potential for
- longitudinal analysis. Preparation and distribution of comprehensive
- documentation and a User Guide also facilitate use of the PSID data."
-
- "The study has been conducted at the Survey Research Center,
- University of Michigan since its beginning in 1968, with the
- Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR)
- data archive handling the public distribution of the data files,
- documentation, and User Guide. PSID data files have been disseminated
- widely throughout the United States and to numerous foreign
- countries."
-
- The site has very extensive documentation, extensive introductory
- material, a newsletter, and lists of the very large number of working
- papers and publications that use the data (some of this material is
- in RTF (Rich Text Format), which can be read by Microsoft Word or
- WordPerfect). Some material is even available in languages other than
- English.
-
- The entry "PSID Files" contains the main PSID files. There are
- individual "family files" from 1968 to 1996, as well as a "24 year
- individual file." When uncompressed, they become ASCII files, and SAS
- and SPSS programs are available that will bring the data into those
- packages. Additional datasets include (i) Active Saving Files, (ii)
- Estimating Risk Tolerance, (iii)Health Care Burden File, (iv)
- Marriage and Birth History Supplements, (v) Parent Health Supplement,
- (vi) Relationship File, (vii) Telephone Health Questionnaire
- Supplement, and (viii) Self Administered Questionnaire Supplement.
- The "What's New" section shows availability of newest datasets and is
- updated frequently.
-
- # http://www.isr.umich.edu/src/psid/
-
-
- 2.2.18 Study of American Families, 1994
-
- [extends GSS]
-
- This study extends the General Social Survey (GSS) with information
- on "the role of families in the transmission and maintenance of
- socioeconomic inequality." To this end, they collected data on GSS
- respondents' first occupation, mother's occupations when respondents
- were young, and GSS respondents' first spouses (if married more than
- once). GSS respondents' first spouses (if married more than once)."
- Another extension to the GSS was a short test of cognitive ability.
- Finally, additional information was obtained on the respondents'
- siblings.
-
- The data is available on-line, and the staff will archive datasets
- onto CD-ROMs for users on or off campus (the University of
- Wisconsin).
-
- The data is available on-line.
-
- # http://DPLS.DACC.WISC.EDU/SAF/
-
-
- 2.2.19 Department of the Treasury
-
- [many areas; includes financing the federal debt, international
- finance, and federal spending]
-
- One item of particular interest is the "Treasury Bulletin," which has
- three sections. The first is "Financial Operations" (with details on
- federal fiscal operations, the accounts of the Treasury, the Federal
- Debt, and Public Debt Operations, which deals with Treasury
- financing). This section also covers the ownership of federal
- securities. The second section is "International Statistics," which
- covers capital movements, the stabilization fund, and the like. The
- third section is "Special Reports." In all these reports, there is
- great detail, as one would expect. Some of the data is in spreadsheet
- format.
-
- A second item of likely interest is the "The Monthly Treasury
- Statement of Receipts and Outlays of the United States Government"
- (MTS), which details Treasury operations, and thus of the Federal
- Government.
-
- There are links to agencies that report to or are part of the
- Treasury: the Comptroller of the Currency, the Office of Thrift
- Supervision (OTS), the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, the U.S.
- Customs Service, and the IRS.
-
- There is also considerable material of "consumer" interest, such as
- on Treasury securities, savings bonds, IRS forms (they can be
- downloaded here), and information from the Mint. Finally, there is
- information on the Treasury itself, which includes speeches and press
- releases.
-
- # http://www.ustreas.gov/
-
-
- 2.2.20 Energy Information Administration (EIA)
-
- This agency, part of the U.S. Department of Energy, offers a wide
- variety of information in this area, broadly defined. Indeed, it is a
- veritable treasure trove of useful information on nuclear, oil,
- natural gas, coal, and other forms of energy. If you are looking for
- information in any way related to energy, this is a fine place to
- look.
-
- # http://www.eia.doe.gov/
-
-
- 2.2.21 Energy Resources Board
-
- The ERB, part of the Department of Energy, is separate from the
- Energy Information Administration. "Its purpose is to provide a
- consolidated and integrated home page for the member offices: Energy
- Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Energy Information Administration,
- Energy Research, Fossil Energy, Nuclear Energy, and Policy." In
- short, it contains a variety of useful information for economists
- interested in information in this sphere of the economy.
-
- # http://www.eia.doe.gov/energy/
-
-
- 2.2.22 Datazone: EPI's Labor Market Data
-
- The Economic Policy Institute makes a considerable amount of summary
- labor market data available here. It includes national, regional, and
- state data on employment, unemployment, wages, wage distribution,
- median hourly wages, the college -- high school wage premium, a
- historical minimum wage series, etc. Much of the data starts in 1979.
-
- # http://epinet.org/datazone/dzlocal.html
-
-
- 2.2.23 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
-
- This site contains extensive statistical information on the banking
- system in the U.S. of interest to economists and bankers, as well as
- more general information on the FDIC and the banking system, some of
- which will be of interest to the general public. There are also press
- releases and speeches, as well as background information on the FDIC.
-
- The "Data Bank" includes the "FDIC Institution Directory System,"
- which "provides the latest comprehensive financial profile for every
- FDIC-insured institution." The FDIC/OTS "Summary of Deposits"
- provides "detailed information on over 82,000 branches of
- FDIC-insured institutions. Individual office data can be obtained for
- each institution or for each state and county. Aggregate data are
- available at the state and county level and for metropolitan areas."
- Other data sets include "FDIC Institutions," "Statistics on Banking,"
- "Historical Statistics on Banking," and the "Survey of Real Estate
- Trends."
-
- # http://www.fdic.gov/
-
-
- 2.2.24 Government Information Sharing Project
-
- [repacked data (regional, econ. and agric. census, exports/imports,
- and federal spending by cities and counties)]
-
- This project, run by Oregon State University, offers a number of very
- useful regional demographic and economic databases. They include "USA
- Counties 1996" (with data from the Census), the "1990 Census of
- Population and Housing" (again with easily obtained, well-organized,
- and detailed data), and "Population Estimates by Age, Sex, and Race:
- 1990-1997." Other databases include the "Equal Employment Opportunity
- File: 1990" (which has "occupation distribution and educational
- attainment data by sex, race, and Hispanic origin," the "Regional
- Economic Information System: 1969-1996" from the BEA, the "1992
- Economic Census" disks 1J (Census of Mineral Industries, Census of
- Construction Industries, and Minority- and Women-Owned Businesses),
- disk 2B (ZIP Code Statistics) and disk 4 (Nonemployer Statistics).
- Finally, other databases include "US Imports/Exports (1993-1997),"
- the "Consolidated Federal Funds Report 1987-1996" (which shows
- federal spending and obligations on a county and city basis), "School
- District Data Book Profiles: 1989-1990," the "Census of Agriculture:
- 1982, 1987, and 1992," and "Earnings by Occupation and Education:
- 1990."
-
- # http://govinfo.kerr.orst.edu/
-
-
- 2.2.25 U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC)
-
- [large number of trade-related resources (includes many links)]
-
- This site is very useful for the academic and practicing trade
- economist. It includes: weekly petitions and complaints filed with
- the agency; a monthly calendar of hearings, deadline dates, and
- status of investigations; five-year (Sunset) reviews; news releases;
- notices from the Federal Register dealing with the USITC; numerous
- reports and publications; the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
- United States; USITC Tariff Database; International Harmonization of
- Customs Rules of Origin; and a bibliography of trade-related law
- articles. They also have an extensive list of Internet resources by
- country, industry, and region that many will find useful.
-
- # http://www.usitc.gov/
-
-
- 2.2.26 Joint Economic Committee: House of Representatives
-
- [policy papers of the majority party in Congress]
-
- This committee is one of only four joint committees in the U.S.
- Congress. While it could be argued that the material does carry some
- biases of the majority party, it does provide a valuable viewpoint.
- There are a large number of press releases and a smaller number of
- policy papers. Some topics covered are: Federal Reserve policy and
- inflation, economic growth, fiscal policy, the welfare state and the
- size of government, the middle class, and tort reform.
-
- # http://www.house.gov/jec/welcome.htm
-
-
- 2.2.27 Joint Economic Committee: U.S. Senate
-
- The material supplied by this committee (one of four joint committees
- in the U.S. Congress) presents valuable opinions, though it may carry
- the biases of the majority party. This site provides the JEC reports,
- hearings, press releases and other events. Reports are from the last
- four Congresses and focus on foreign affairs, taxes, economic growth,
- employment, and other items of topical interest.
-
- # http://www.senate.gov/~jec
-
-
- 2.2.28 National Trade Data Bank
-
- While probably not of much interest to academic economists, this site
- pulls together a very wide range of information (more than a
- gigabyte) from more than 25 U.S. government agencies that will be of
- interest to firms wishing to export from the U.S. Much of the
- information is fee-based. Obviously, it contains a substantial amount
- of material that may be of interest to those interested in non-U.S.
- countries. One can even search the entire database with "natural
- language requests" (that is, you can query the database as you might
- a person).
-
- # http://www.stat-usa.gov/tradtest.nsf
-
-
- 2.2.29 National Transportation Statistics
-
- This organization, part of the Department of Transportation,
- generates a variety of statistics on the U.S.'s transportation
- system. Besides "Transportation Statistics Annual Report " (found in
- the "Transportation Studies" section), this site includes other
- extensive data (in spreadsheet format) from the "National
- Transportation Data Archive." This includes the "FAA Statistical
- Handbook of Aviation" and the "Commodity Flow Survey," a joint
- project of the DOT and Census which tracks shipments in the U.S.
- There are also data sets from the FAA, the Coast Guard, the Federal
- Highway Administration, and the Army Corps of Engineers. It also
- contains information on the "Journal of Transportation and
- Statistics," sponsored jointly be the Bureau of Transportation
- Statistics and the U.S. Department of Transportation.
-
- # http://www.bts.gov
-
-
- 2.2.30 Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
-
- This site provides a great deal of information on trade issues.
- Besides information on itself, this includes press releases, reports,
- speeches, and testimony. Perhaps even more useful are the NAFTA and
- GATT trade agreements.
-
- # http://www.ustr.gov/
-
-
- 2.2.31 Social Security Administration (SSA)
-
- [extensive data on trust funds, beneficiaries, and studies]
-
- By its nature, this site offers a variety of material for employers,
- employees, and beneficiaries. However, there is substantial
- statistical information from the "Office of Research, Evaluation and
- Statistics (ORES)" and the "Office of the Chief Actuary." The former
- includes the "Current Operating Statistics Tables" (with everything
- from the trust funds, to current benefits to black lung benefits),
- income maintenance programs, economic indicators, beneficiaries by
- county, and studies on disability programs. The latter includes data
- on the financial aspects of the Trust Fund, and beneficiary data, as
- well as other material.
-
- # http://www.ssa.gov/
- # Information: Bruce Carter <bwcarter@ssa.gov>
-
-
- 2.2.32 Standard Industrial Classifications (SIC)
-
- This page, run by the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety
- and Health Administration (OSHA), offers two ways to find 4-digit SIC
- codes: by searching for a specific codes by keywords and by browsing
- the actual classifications. Note that SIC codes have been superseded
- by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) on
- January 1, 1997 (information on it can be found at the Census web
- site).
-
- # http://www.osha.gov/oshstats/sicser.html
-
-
- 2.2.33 USDA Agriculture Economic Research Service
-
- This service is distinct from the USDA Economics and Statistics
- System at Cornell University. Besides reading about the mission and
- organization of the service (including e-mail addresses), you can
- also read many of their publications. You can also retrieve their
- data (much of it from the Cornell site). They also offer a "Special
- Topics Briefing Room," where they address a variety of topical
- issues. Finally, they offer an extensive catalog of their products.
-
- # http://www.econ.ag.gov/
-
-
- 2.2.34 USDA Economics and Statistics System (Cornell Univ.)
-
- This project is jointly sponsored by the Mann Library at Cornell
- University, the USDA's Economic Research Service, the National
- Agricultural Statistics Service, and World Agricultural Outlook
- Board. It contains more than 300 reports and data sets from the
- economic agencies of the USDA. By subject area, they are
-
- # Agricultural Baseline Projections
- # Farm Sector Economics
- # Field Crops
- # Food
- # Inputs, Technology, and Weather
- # International Agriculture
- # Land, Water, and Conservation
- # Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry
- # Miscellaneous
- # Rural Affairs
- # Specialty Agriculture
- # Trade Issues
-
- These data sets cover a very wide range of agricultural topics, and
- even include international and climate data. The are categorized in a
- number of different ways. They are frequently quite detailed, and can
- be viewed using a spreadsheets and occasionally with dBase.
-
- # http://usda.mannlib.cornell.edu
-
-
-