PapersFlow for Economics & Business Research
Power economics research with FRED economic data (800K+ time series), World Bank indicators, econometric analysis with statsmodels, and data export for empirical studies.
Access FRED economic data and World Bank indicators, run econometric analysis with statsmodels, generate scatter plots and regressions, and export in Chicago Author-Date format.
Economics research requires constantly moving between academic papers, economic data sources, and statistical analysis. You read a paper claiming UBI reduces poverty, need to check the underlying data in FRED, compare across countries using World Bank indicators, and run your own regressions to verify the claims. Each step lives in a different tool, and the time spent switching contexts and reformatting data is time not spent on actual analysis.
What You Can Do
- FRED Economic Data (800K+ Time Series)
- World Bank Development Indicators
- Econometric Analysis (Python Sandbox)
- Data Export (CSV, Excel & Charts)
Tools
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Can PapersFlow access real-time economic data from FRED?
- PapersFlow provides access to FRED's 800,000+ time series. Data is current as of the most recent FRED update. You can pull specific series by name or let PapersFlow identify relevant indicators based on your research question.
- Does it support econometric analysis beyond OLS?
- Yes. The Python sandbox includes statsmodels, which supports OLS, 2SLS/IV estimation, panel data models (fixed effects, random effects), time series models (ARIMA, VAR), logit/probit, and various diagnostic tests. You can run publication-quality econometric analyses directly in the platform.
- Can I compare findings across countries using World Bank data?
- Yes. PapersFlow can pull World Bank development indicators for 200+ countries, allowing you to create cross-country comparisons, generate scatter plots, and run panel regressions that combine published findings with actual development data.
- Does it handle the Chicago citation format properly?
- Yes. Economics outputs use Chicago Author-Date format by default, with parenthetical in-text citations (Author Year) and properly formatted reference lists. This is compatible with AER, QJE, Econometrica, and other major economics journals.