
Links for Economists
American Economics
Association.
Bureau of Economic Analysis
(BEA): produces and disseminates economic accounts statistics
that provide a picture of economic activity in the United
States.
Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS): principal fact-finding agency for the federal government
in the broad field of labor economics and statistics.
Council
of Economic Advisers: includes text of the Economic
Report of the President, whitepapers, and the monthly
Economic Indicators publication.
The
Dead Economists Society: provides information on the
extraordinary insights of classical liberal economists.
EconLit: the AEA's
electronic bibliography of economics literature throughout
the world.
The Economist:
provides insight and opinion on international news, world
politics, business, finance, science and technology, and
cultural trends.
Fedstats: statistics
from federal agencies, available broken down geographically,
by agency, or in other forms.
The Federal Reserve
Bank.
Federal
Reserve Economic Data (FRED): hosted by the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
Inomics: contains
an economics search engine, job openings for economists,
and conference calls in economics as well free alert services
for the latter.
National Bureau of Economic
Research.
Office of Management
and Budget: official White House site.
Omicron Delta Epsilon:
international collegiate Economics honor society.
Panel Study of Income
Dynamics: longitudinal survey of a representative
sample of U.S. individuals (men, women, and children)
and the families in which they reside, ongoing since 1968.
Princeton Review.
The Resources for Economists
website.
U.S. Bureau of the Census.
World Bank Group:
Source of development assistance for developing nations.
Comprises the Int'l Bank for Reconstruction and Development,
the Int'l Development Association, the Int'l Finance Corp,
the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, and the
Int'l Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes.
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