The World Factbook provides information on the history, people and society, government, economy, energy, geography, communications, transportation, military, and transnational issues for 267 world entities>>ClickHere>>>
Tools and Resources centre
OpenSpending
OpenSpending is a free, open and global platform to search, visualise and analyse fiscal data in the public sphere>>ClickHere>>>
SNAP library
The SNAP library is being actively developed since 2004 and is organically growing as a result of our research pursuits in analysis of large social and information networks>>ClickHere>>
Gapminder
data visualization tools to let people explore the vast treasure of global statistics>>ClickHere>>
data.world
data.world unites and classifies all of your business’s data, metadata, and analysis within an intuitive user experience to help technical and non-technical people collaborate using their preferred tools. Built on a knowledge graph, data.world keeps your most valuable information assets connected to everything people need to find, understand, and use them >>ClickHere>>>
Business population estimates
This data downloader allows users to download headline data in a quick and flexible manner>>ClickHere>>
National Statistics publications on the UK business population
This paper summarises the key features of the three National Statistics publications on the UK business population. It explains how they relate to each other and points out differences in coverage, to enable users to make an informed choice about which publication they should use>>ClickHere>>>
Market Potential and Development
This paper provides evidence on the long-term impact of market potential on economic development. It derives from the New Economic Geography literature a structural estimation where the level of factors’ income of a country is related to its export capacity, labelled Market Access (MA) by Redding and Venables (2004), or Real Market Potential (RMP) by Head and Mayer (2004). The empirical part evaluates this market potential for all countries in the world with available trade data over the 1960-2003 period and relates it to income per capita. Overall results show that market potential is a powerful driver of increases in income per capita.>>ClickHere>>
Market selection for international expansion: Assessing opportunities in emerging market
Traditional market selection analysis relies on purely macroeconomic and political factors and fails to account for an emerging market’s dynamism and future potential. The objective of this paper is to present a tool composed of four criteria specific to the preliminary assessment of emerging markets (EM) as international expansion opportunities. Design/methodology/approach – Based on the literature pointing out the limitations of international market selection (IMS) models and the need for a specialized approach, additional criteria are introduced to assess emerging market potential. Review of prior work on internationalization, EM and market selection provided the rationale for the selected criteria. Using secondary data and primary data from a sample of 500, the proposed criteria are applied to the assessment of an emerging market for US apparel specialty retailers. Findings – Assessment of the emerging market with the criteria introduced revealed growth and sourcing opportunities that might otherwise have been overlooked. Case application exposed strong future market potential, manageable level of cultural distance, supportive and developing local industry and positive customer receptiveness for foreign products and business. The findings illustrate the need to improve and supplement assessment criteria of traditional analysis for EM. Research limitations/implications – Follow-up studies validating, integrating and determining the relative importance of the criteria introduced will contribute to the development of an assessment model for EM. Practical implications – A useful complementary tool for international marketers>>ClickHere>>
Estimating Market Potential: Is There a Market?
Market potential is an estimate of the amount of money your clients can expect to make from the product or service they plan to market>>ClickHere>>