Archive for May, 2009

The interesting part are the bubble roll-overs: they show who tookover each bank’s assets, and how much each closure cost the FDIC.

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Charts from Ritholtz below. An amusing article on how they’re trying to spin them as not that bad: “Case-Shiller Sucks. But Who Cares, That’s Just Backwards Looking” by Joe Weisenthal.

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From the Center for Global Development, the Commitment to Development Index (CDI) rates 22 rich countries on how much they help poor countries build prosperity, good government, and security. Each rich country gets scores in seven policy areas, which are averaged for an overall score.

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Updated with data from the latest World Economic Outlook report. Allows drill down, country and aggregate comparisons (via the chart at the bottom), and animation of the last 29 years (to watch the world change). You can also view other datasets (BOP, etc).

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The data is a little bit old, but it’s still an interesting look at the country.

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“From the early 1990s through the peak of the last business cycle, relatively low U.S. unemployment rates seemed to make the United States a model for the rest of the world’s economies. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and other international organizations all praised the U.S. unemployment performance and urged the rest of the world’s rich countries to emulate the “flexibility” of the U.S. model.  However, this report shows that in the current economic crisis, the U.S. unemployment rate ranks 4th to last among the major OECD countries.” Source: CEPR

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Foreign Policy has an article on how VesselTracker.com uses Google Earth to literally show the stalled world economy in the form of ships sitting idle off the shore of Singapore.

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These info graphics are always pretty, but I sometimes wonder if a table isn’t just as good, or better. Perhaps if they added capital flows.

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Well, they have DC-2009 wrong (isn’t law yet).

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The WSJ stress-tested 900+ smaller banks. Sort by stress scenario, size, state, and tarp-recipients. Related article.

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In case you are having trouble keeping all the bullshit straight.

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a more comprehensive (and likely regularly updated) version is at Kayak.

A little old now, but I like this type of multi-indicator chart. The original was part of an AP interactive graphic that included maps.

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More good work from AP. Shows unemployment, foreclosures, bankruptcy, and a composite “stress index”. Double click on a region to zoom in; click&hold to move around.

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Not much information here – just updated GDP data. Related article.

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An addictive collection of beautiful charts, graphs, maps, and interactive data visualization toys -- on topics from around the world.

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