$theTitle=wp_title(" - ", false); if($theTitle != "") { ?>
Nothing all that new data-wise, but what’s interesting is the tool and the odd list of groups that the tool uses as filters, including “primarily muslim”, “smallest area”, “Horn of Africa” and others.
In: Global Economy
5 Oct 2009A month old now (new IMF data is now available), but this slideshow of charts from the BBC shows the changing GDP predictions over the course of the crisis.
It’s unclear what the vintage of the data is, but the below map shows G20 crisis spending. Thanks to Silona for the heads up.
In: Bailout Finance Source: FT
5 Oct 2009A little old (circa 2007), and probably the wrong thing to follow that last post with, but here’s a map of where the ratios of single men-to-women are imbalanced in America. Have a nice weekend!
In: Culture
2 Oct 2009The original data is from the UN. It would be interesting to see this stat for the United States.
A nice change from the usual line chart, from the WSJ.
In: Culture
2 Oct 2009Old people and young people often disagree on important issues. the chart below illustrates how different our culture’s views of gay marriage are across generations (and states, for that matter). From Ryan Sager.
In: Employment Finance Housing Reference Source: NYT US Economy
2 Oct 2009The NYT has a nice tiny tool that provides the most recent data for 25 economic indicators (housing, employment, production, confidence, etc). It appears at the top of their “Economy” page, and an ugly version of the flash tool can be viewed directly here.
A map of foreign direct investment inflows, in percent of GDP. Somewhat oddly, you have to click on the different ratio ranges at the bottom to color the relevant countries – at a minimum, they should have included the option to see the whole map (all ranges) colored at once.
An addictive collection of beautiful charts, graphs, maps, and interactive data visualization toys -- on topics from around the world.
Economic Theories Explained with Stick Figures
In: Commentary Humor Politics
2 Oct 2009