PROFESSIONAL RESOURCES AND PROFESSIONAL SEARCH TOOLS:
Economists
with
Web Pages, Econometric
Society Directory of Members, and AEA
Directory of Members. A very useful data base linking
registered economists with their papers
contained in that data base and affiliated online working paper
databases
is HoPEc (![]()
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and its associated RePEc having even
more
information.
That excellent archive also includes a list of "top
economists" by three different lead indicators: number of
working
paper downloads, number of online abstract viewings, and number of
working
papers online. All three are on the same page, so it is necessary
to scroll down that long page to find the results. Alternative
rankings of economists, based upon criteria relevant to the Nobel Prize
in Economics, can be found in The Noble Prize section of this page
below. These latter rankings are based upon papers already
published and citations of them, rather than upon recent working papers
that may not yet have been published or cited.
You can find ratings of professors as teachers at RateMyProfessors.com, but the ratings, which are by students, seem mostly to be based upon undergraduate courses taught.
For local rankings here in the state of Kansas,
you can find the RePEc ranking of economists, based upon their
research. The ranking lists those economists in this state who
rank in the top 20% in the country. For a much higher global
standard, you can find the list of all of the economists in the world
who rank in the top 5% in the world.
Christian Zimmermann's list of Economics Departments in the United States and his full list of Economics Departments, Institutes and Research Centers in the World, and the University of Victoria's list of Non-US Economics Departments on the Internet.
Resources for Economists on the
Internet (![]()
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),
the Econometric Society,
the American
Economic
Association, the Society
for
Computational Economics, More
Economics Resources (from WebEc) (![]()
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), Even
More Economics Resources (from Yahoo),
Economics Conferences Worldwide, and Hal
Varian's List of Economics Resources. Also see Aykut
Kibritcioglu's home page, which contains a number of interesting
sections
on economics in Turkey and on European Economic Integration. Mark
Zandi's
highly regarded Economy.com
provides most of its services only to subscribers, but a lot of data
can
be acquired from that site at no charge. For a search engine of economics resources, see the Internet Resources
Catalogue, maintained by biz/ed in the UK. For an especially
promising
commercial site of economic links, see:
The Social Science Citation Index is an unusually
useful resource
for economists. If you are here at the University of Kansas, you have
access
to that index through the Web
of Science or directly.
The
most informative way to use that index to find
information about an author is to use the "full search" and "cited
reference
search" features for all years. The search uses last name and
initials. You can replace the middle initial by an asterisk to
get all persons with that first name and first initial. For
example, if you search for barnett w*, you will find all cited
publications by authors having my last name and first initial and any
middle initial. If you search under barnett w, you will find only
papers published by authors having my last name and first initial and
not using any middle initial on the publication. If you search
under barnett wa, you will find all publications having my last name,
first initial, and middle initial, and using both initials on the
publication.
If you are seeking impact factor and immediacy index rankings
of journal's from the Social Science Citation Index, you will need to
find the Journal Citation Reports within the Web of Science above. But there is another route to finding those reports, if you are at the U. of Kansas. First go to http://infogateway.ku.edu.
You should be on the Databases window. On its "by title" line,
select "J". Scroll down the titles beginning with "J" until you
find "Journal Citation Reports."
For lead indicators of productivity, visibility, and citations based upon online working paper downloads, views, and quantity, see the "top economists" rankings and database within HoPEc, in the Individual Economists section above.
Business Schools on the Internet.
The American Statistical
Association
and the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics.
For especially interesting mathematical illustrations, see the Gallery
of Mathematics,
which contains an especially interesting demonstration of the famous
period-doubling phenomenon towards chaos with the logistic map, along
with some famous fractal illustrations and other such mathematical
exotica.
American
Universities, All
Colleges and Universities Internationally, and Canadian
Universities.
Want to know the truth about U. S. politicians? Find out what they really believe at the Vote Smart Web.
Flags of All Countries
can be surprisingly useful and interesting. For example, you will find
the following statement on that page: "We add non-country flags on
request
only, at our discretion." The non-country flags that appear "by popular
demand" include Scotland, Northern Ireland, Hong Kong, Palestine,
Kurdistan,
Tibet, S. Vietnam, Wales, England, Puerto Rico, Quebec,..., etc. Also
this
page contains useful links to a number of other interesting sites,
including
sites on immigration, UNICEF, maps of countries of the world, internet
country codes, and other such bits of useful information. Combined with
its link to the CIA's World Fact Book, this cite is more
valuable
than any published World Almanac. This gem of a site currently reports
over 3.5 million hits per month.
Care to know to what candidates your neighbors may have
contributed? All donations to a political candidate over $200 are
public information and are available online at Neighbor Search.
See the widely used Quantitative
Macro and RBC Home Page, maintained by Christian Zimmermann at the
University of Connecticut. In addition to many well selected links,
this
site
includes a lot of original material. Don't miss this site. You can
really
learn something here. This guy is providing a true public service to
serious
economic researchers. (![]()
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)
An innovative area of research is agent
based economics (ABE), having a web page maintained by Leigh
Tesfastsion.
If Post Keynesian Economics is your interest, see The
Post Keynesian Thought archive. Regarding Austrian School
economics,
see the Ludwig von Mises Institute. If
it fits your interests, see The
History
of Economics Society home page and the very interesting History of Economic
Thought website maintained at the New School University in New York.
The following resource pages also provide their own original
contributions to the Web:
The premier source on The
Information Economy is maintained by Hal Varian at Berkeley and
is ![]()
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,
while a complementary site on the Economics
of Networks is maintained by Nicholas Economides at NYU and is ![]()
.
The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
contains extensive information about the history of the prize and about
all of the Laureates in all of the prize's fields. This site is fully
interactive
and permits insertion of your own links. So go there and speak your
mind.
There are a number of "straw poles" each year in which
economists try to guess who will win the next Nobel Prize in
Economics. But perhaps the most informative and objective source
of relevant information is provided by Thomas Coupe at the National
University in Kyiv, Ukraine. He has provided two potential "Nobel
Lists," one based upon publications
1969-2000 and the other based upon citations
1975-2000. Unfortunately the citations list is not weighted by
the quality of the publications in which the citations appeared, but
the publications ranking is quality weighted. He has not removed
from either list those economists who already have won the Nobel Prize,
so it can be interesting to see where they are within those two
lists. There also is a rather novel and interesting Nobel Price
Market operated in Germany and providing prizes for participants in
their "market." Although this is not widely known, you can find the Prize Committee for the Nobel Prize in Economics
online at the cite of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The
selection of the winners is under the control of the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences, and its selection procedures are online along with the criteria for the right to submit proposals.
Current and potential students may find useful information in Peterson's Education Center. Also see the Financial Aid Information Page, the FastWeb Financial Search Page, and the OPE Web Site on governmental sources of financial aid. For a general resource site for economics students, see Economicsearch.
The one to beat is the well known Quicken
site, which even permits a search for the best available mortgage to
fit
your needs. But also look at the excellent Microsoft
Home Advisor for mortgages. These two sites have links to many
associated
online services that they provide on personal finance.
In these days of growing online banking, including some banks that
have no brick-and-mortar branches, it can be useful to check
periodically into the best available rates on CD's and other such
deposits and services provided by banks as well as on the safety rankings of your banks. A good source of that
information is bankrate.com. You also might want to check ambest.com, although I find it usually to be less useful than bankrate.com.
Mortgage calculations can be complicated, such as determining the
effect of an extra payment, refinancing, etc. Excellent mortgage
and financial calculators are online at mortgageloan.com.
A useful source of information, if you are planning to buy a computer, is PriceWatch. For reviews of computer hardware, see CNET. You also may wish to check directly with some of the companies that sell their own equipment by mail order, such as Toshiba, Dell, and Micron.
For some purposes, you may need to set up your own web site
that is not on your employer's server, or you may want to register a
short domain name to use as an alias for your current URL, which might
be long and awkward. You can purchase such services at register.com.