Awesome Economics
A curated collection of links for economists. Part of the “Awesome X” series .
The list is periodically updated with new links. Click “Watch” in the right top corner to follow.
Your contributions are welcomed. Add links to “Links Sent by Readers” by yourself or send new content to antontarasenko@gmail.com.
Table of Contents
Studying
Courses
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MIT OCW Economics - Over 100 courses covering all major fields of economics. Courses include prerequisites, recommended textbooks, lecture slides, and assignments. Undergraduate and graduate programs.
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edX Economics - Introductory topics, few prerequisites.
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Khan Academy: Economics - Elementary topics.
Useful Materials
Research
Portals
Articles and Working Papers
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IDEAS RePEc - The largest database of economics publications (2,000,000 items). Searching through papers is easier with Google:
site:ideas.repec.org <search term>
. Index sources mentioned below.
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NBER - Working papers by major researchers. Many of these papers get published in peer-reviewed journal.
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SSRN Economics - Working papers, no journal publications.
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Google Scholar - Searching academic literature in general. Features author pages and citation counters. If you look for economic writings only, IDEAS would be more powerful.
Data
Datasets
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FRED2 - 380,000 (macro) time series from 80 sources. Supports plugins for importing data into Excel, Stata, R, and others. Has a mobile app.
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World Bank Data - International macro time series. Has data import plugins.
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IMF Data - The standard reference for macro data.
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Quandl - Aggregate financial and economic data from multiple sources. Some data vendors sell their data via this service. Good integration with statistical software.
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MEDevEcon - Data related to development economics.
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Monetary Economics: Data Sources - Overview of macro data sources.
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OFFSTATS - Links to official data sources by country and subject.
Search
Software
Writing
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LaTeX - Economists write in LaTeX because it handles mathematics and references better than Word or LibreOffice. If you write regularly, LaTeX is worth learning.
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LyX - A free and simple editor for LaTeX.
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Zotero - Bibliography management. Also install (a) Zotero browser plugin to import papers from RePEc to your library; (b) Zotero-LyX plugin to cite literature easily.
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Git - A version control system. Useful if you want to revert changes done months ago or collaborate with other authors. DropBox also has version control, but Git is more explicit. A short intro. Or use GitHub Desktop if you like it simple.
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Mendeley - Bibliography management. Support synchronization on multiple plateforms: Mac, Windows, Ipad, Phone…
Computing
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Stata - An industry standard for statistical computations in economics. Free alternatives:
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IPython - A Python-based environment. Econometric analysis is done with free packages: statsmodels, SciPy, NumPy, pandas.
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RStudio - An R-based environment. R is the standard language among statisticians, so the R repositories often contain specialized libraries not available in other languages.
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Matlab - An industry standard for modeling and numerical optimization in economics. Free alternatives:
- Octave
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Julia - High-level dynamic programming language designed to address the needs of high-performance numerical analysis and computational science.
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Mathematica - Symbolic computations. Free alternative
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Julia - An open source scientific computing softerware.
Sharing
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GitHub - A repository for code and data. Publishing research here is not a common practice, but it’s more convenient that alternatives (university home page, DropBox, etc.).
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IPython Notebooks - An interactive alternative to LaTeX and Word. See examples how notebooks look like in data-science-ipython-notebooks and the gallery .
Reviews
Useful Materials
Discussions
- Blogs - The most popular form of self-expression among economists. The major blog aggregators:
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Economics Blog Search - A Google-based search service for aforementioned blogs.
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AEA Blog Directory - The list of major economic blogs.
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StackExchange Economics - A Q&A website where you can ask and answer questions.
- Reddit - A popular news aggregator. Has many economics-related sections, for example:
- Discord - A popular chat platform
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Academic Economics - A community with rooms to discuss economics and help members with exercises
Career
Undergraduate
- University rankings - May help in choosing a college.
Graduate
Faculty
Economics on GitHub
Sorted alphabetically
Economists
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davidrpugh - Institute for New Economic Thinking, Oxford Martin School; Oxford Mathematical Institute, Oxford, UK.
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gboehl - Universität Bonn, Bonn, Germany.
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hmgaudecker - Universität Bonn, Bonn, Germany.
- jesusfv
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jstac - Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
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mwt - Northwestern University, USA
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nathanlane - Institute for International Economic Studies, Stockholm, Sweden.
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nealbob - Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
- robertdkirkby
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trickvi - Hagstofa Íslands, Iceland.
Projects
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EconForge - Team around Pablo Winant providing packages to solve economic models.
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economics-book - Economics Textbook (Openstax).
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econpizza - Toolbox to solve and simulate nonlinear models with heterogeneous agents.
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fecon235 - Computational tools for financial economics, Python code base and tutorials using Jupyter notebooks, includes data retrieval, graphics, and optimization.
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macro_puzzles - A list of puzzles in macroeconomics.
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pydsge - Tools to solve, filter, and estimate DSGE models with occasionally binding constraints.
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pyeconomics - Computational economics in Python.
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QuantEcon - A library for quantitative economics.
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quantecon_nyu_2016 - Topics in Computational Economics
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VFI Toolkit - Matlab toolkit for Value Function Iteration on GPU.
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zice-2014 - Course materials for Zurich Initiative for Computational Economics (ZICE) 2014.
Links Sent by Readers
License