100+ datasets found
  1. World Bank: Education Data

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Mar 20, 2019
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    World Bank (2019). World Bank: Education Data [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/theworldbank/world-bank-intl-education
    Explore at:
    zip(0 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 20, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    Authors
    World Bank
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Context

    The World Bank is an international financial institution that provides loans to countries of the world for capital projects. The World Bank's stated goal is the reduction of poverty. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Bank

    Content

    This dataset combines key education statistics from a variety of sources to provide a look at global literacy, spending, and access.

    For more information, see the World Bank website.

    Fork this kernel to get started with this dataset.

    Acknowledgements

    https://bigquery.cloud.google.com/dataset/bigquery-public-data:world_bank_health_population

    http://data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/ed-stats

    https://cloud.google.com/bigquery/public-data/world-bank-education

    Citation: The World Bank: Education Statistics

    Dataset Source: World Bank. This dataset is publicly available for anyone to use under the following terms provided by the Dataset Source - http://www.data.gov/privacy-policy#data_policy - and is provided "AS IS" without any warranty, express or implied, from Google. Google disclaims all liability for any damages, direct or indirect, resulting from the use of the dataset.

    Banner Photo by @till_indeman from Unplash.

    Inspiration

    Of total government spending, what percentage is spent on education?

  2. World Development Indicators

    • datacatalog.hshsl.umaryland.edu
    • datacatalog1.worldbank.org
    • +1more
    Updated Apr 24, 2024
    + more versions
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    World Bank (2024). World Development Indicators [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.hshsl.umaryland.edu/dataset/79
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 24, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    Authors
    World Bank
    Area covered
    Global
    Description

    The World Development Indicators (WDI) is the primary World Bank collection of development indicators, compiled from officially recognized international sources. It presents the most current and accurate global development data available, and includes national, regional and global estimates. You can create your own queries; generate tables, charts, and maps; and easily save, embed, and share them. (From the World Bank DataBank website). It is one of the databases in the World Bank DataBank.

  3. Data on Statistical Capacity

    • datacatalog.worldbank.org
    • datasearch.gesis.org
    databank
    Updated Nov 28, 2023
    + more versions
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    Juderica Zilla Josephine Dias (2023). Data on Statistical Capacity [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/search/dataset/0037854/data-on-statistical-capacity
    Explore at:
    databankAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 28, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    Juderica Zilla Josephine Dias
    License

    https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/public-licenses?fragment=cchttps://datacatalog.worldbank.org/public-licenses?fragment=cc

    Description

    The Data on Statistical Capacity website provides information on various aspects of national statistical systems of developing countries, including a country-level statistical capacity indicator.

    The Statistical Capacity Index (SCI) has been replaced by the Statistical Performance Indicators (SPI), which provide a more comprehensive framework for measuring the performance of national statistical systems. For further details, please visit https://www.worldbank.org/en/programs/statistical-performance-indicators/about-spi#4 to learn about the differences between the SCI and its successor.

  4. o

    Education Statistics

    • data.opendata.am
    • data360.worldbank.org
    Updated Jul 7, 2023
    + more versions
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    (2023). Education Statistics [Dataset]. https://data.opendata.am/dataset/dcwb0038480
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 7, 2023
    Description

    The World Bank EdStats All Indicator Query holds over 4,000 internationally comparable indicators that describe education access, progression, completion, literacy, teachers, population, and expenditures. The indicators cover the education cycle from pre-primary to vocational and tertiary education.The query also holds learning outcome data from international and regional learning assessments (e.g. PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS), equity data from household surveys, and projection/attainment data to 2050. For further information, please visit the EdStats website.

  5. World Bank: International Debt Data

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Mar 20, 2019
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    World Bank (2019). World Bank: International Debt Data [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/theworldbank/world-bank-intl-debt
    Explore at:
    zip(0 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 20, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    Authors
    World Bank
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Context

    The World Bank is an international financial institution that provides loans to countries of the world for capital projects. The World Bank's stated goal is the reduction of poverty. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Bank

    Content

    This dataset contains both national and regional debt statistics captured by over 200 economic indicators. Time series data is available for those indicators from 1970 to 2015 for reporting countries.

    For more information, see the World Bank website.

    Fork this kernel to get started with this dataset.

    Acknowledgements

    https://bigquery.cloud.google.com/dataset/bigquery-public-data:world_bank_intl_debt

    https://cloud.google.com/bigquery/public-data/world-bank-international-debt

    Citation: The World Bank: International Debt Statistics

    Dataset Source: World Bank. This dataset is publicly available for anyone to use under the following terms provided by the Dataset Source - http://www.data.gov/privacy-policy#data_policy - and is provided "AS IS" without any warranty, express or implied, from Google. Google disclaims all liability for any damages, direct or indirect, resulting from the use of the dataset.

    Banner Photo by @till_indeman from Unplash.

    Inspiration

    What countries have the largest outstanding debt?

    https://cloud.google.com/bigquery/images/outstanding-debt.png" alt="enter image description here"> https://cloud.google.com/bigquery/images/outstanding-debt.png

  6. i

    World Bank Country Survey 2013 - Panama

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • microdata.worldbank.org
    Updated Mar 29, 2019
    + more versions
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    Public Opinion Research Group (2019). World Bank Country Survey 2013 - Panama [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/index.php/catalog/4468
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Public Opinion Research Group
    Time period covered
    2013
    Area covered
    Panama
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Bank is interested in gauging the views of clients and partners who are either involved in development in Panama or who observe activities related to social and economic development. The World Bank Country Assessment Survey is meant to give the World Bank's team that works in Panama, greater insight into how the Bank's work is perceived. This is one tool the World Bank uses to assess the views of its critical stakeholders. With this understanding, the World Bank hopes to develop more effective strategies, outreach and programs that support development in Panama. The World Bank commissioned an independent firm to oversee the logistics of this effort in Panama.

    This survey was designed to achieve the following objectives: - Assist the World Bank in gaining a better understanding of how stakeholders in Panama perceive the Bank;

    • Obtain systematic feedback from stakeholders in Panama regarding: · Their views regarding the general environment in Panama; · Their overall attitudes toward the World Bank in Panama; · Overall impressions of the World Bank's effectiveness and results, knowledge and research, and communication and information sharing in Panama; and · Perceptions of the World Bank's future role in Panama.

    • Use data to help inform the Panama country team's strategy.

    Geographic coverage

    National

    Analysis unit

    Stakeholder

    Universe

    Stakeholders of the World Bank in Panama

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    From June to September 2013, 281 stakeholders of the World Bank in Panama were invited to provide their opinions on the Bank's work in the country by participating in a country survey. Participants in the survey were drawn from the office of the President/Minister, office of a parliamentarian, ministries, ministerial departments, or implementation agencies; consultants/ contractors working on World Bank-supported projects/programs; project management units (PMUs) overseeing implementation of a project; local governments; bilateral and multilateral agencies; private sector organizations; private foundations; the financial sector/private banks; NGOs; community-based organizations; the media; independent government institutions; trade unions; academia/research institutes/think tanks; the judiciary branch; and other organizations.

    Mode of data collection

    Internet [int]

    Research instrument

    The Questionnaire consists of 8 Sections:

    A. General Issues facing Panama: Respondents were asked to indicate whether Panama is headed in the right direction, what they thought were the top three development priorities in Panama, which areas would contribute most to reducing poverty and generating economic growth, and which best illustrates how the idea of "shared prosperity" would be achieved.

    B. Overall Attitudes toward the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate their familiarity with the World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, Latin American Development Bank, and the International Finance Corporation and their perceived effectiveness of these organizations in Panama. They were asked to rate the Bank staff's preparedness to help Panama solve its development challenges, their agreement with various statements regarding the Bank's work, and the extent to which the Bank is an effective development partner. Respondents were asked to indicate the Bank's greatest values, the most effective instruments in helping to reduce poverty in Panama, with which stakeholder groups the Bank should collaborate more.

    C. World Bank Effectiveness and Results: Respondents were asked to rate the extent to which the Bank's work helps achieve development results, the extent to which the Bank meets Panama's needs for knowledge services and financial instruments, and the Bank's level of effectiveness across twenty-two development areas, such as quality of education/skills development, poverty reduction, anti-corruption, social inclusion, and water and sanitation.

    D. The World Bank's Knowledge: Respondents were asked to indicate how frequently they consult the World Bank knowledge work and activities, the areas on which the Bank should focus its research efforts and to rate the effectiveness and quality of the Bank's knowledge work and activities, including how significant of a contribution it makes to development results and its technical quality.

    E. Working with the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate their level of agreement with a series of statements regarding working with the Bank, such as the World Bank's "Safeguard Policy" requirements being reasonable, the Bank imposing reasonable conditions on its lending, disbursing funds promptly, increasing Panama's institutional capacity, and providing effective implementation support.

    F. The Future Role of the World Bank in Panama: Respondents were asked to rate how significant a role international cooperation and the World Bank should play respectively in Panama in the near future and to indicate what the Bank should do to make itself of greater value.

    G. Communication and Information Sharing: Respondents were asked to indicate how they get information about economic and social development issues, how they prefer to receive information from the Bank, and their usage and evaluation of the Bank's websites. Respondents were asked about their awareness of the Bank's Access to Information policy, and whether they used/had used the World Bank website. Respondents were also asked about their level of agreement that they use/consult World Bank data more often they did a few years ago, that they find the World Bank websites easy to navigate, that they know how to find information from the Bank, and that they find the information on the World Bank's websites useful.

    H. Background Information: Respondents were asked to indicate their current position, specialization, whether they professionally collaborate with the World Bank, their exposure to the Bank in Panama, and their geographic location.

    Response rate

    A total of 51 stakeholders participated in the survey (18% response rate).

  7. w

    World Bank Group Country Survey 2024 - Viet Nam

    • microdata.worldbank.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 20, 2024
    + more versions
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    Public Opinion Research Group (2024). World Bank Group Country Survey 2024 - Viet Nam [Dataset]. https://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/6428
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 20, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Public Opinion Research Group
    Time period covered
    2024
    Area covered
    Vietnam
    Description

    Abstract

    The Country Opinion Survey in Viet Nam assists the World Bank Group (WBG) in better understanding how stakeholders in Viet Nam perceive the WBG. It provides the WBG with systematic feedback from national and local governments, multilateral/bilateral agencies, media, academia, the private sector, and civil society in Viet Nam on 1) their views regarding the general environment in Viet Nam; 2) their overall attitudes toward the WBG in Viet Nam; 3) overall impressions of the WBG’s effectiveness and results, knowledge work and activities, and communication and information sharing in Viet Nam; and 4) their perceptions of the WBG’s future role in Viet Nam.

    Geographic coverage

    National coverage

    Analysis unit

    Stakeholders of the World Bank Group in Viet Nam

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    From May to August 2024, a total of 985 stakeholders of the WBG in Viet Nam were invited to provide their opinions about the WBG’s work in the country by participating in a COS. A list of potential participants was compiled by the WBG country team and the field agency. Participants were drawn from the Office of the Prime Minister, Minister, Central Agencies, National Assembly, government institutions, local governments, bilateral/ multilateral agencies, the private sector, civil society organizations, academia, and the media. A total of 389 stakeholders participated in the survey.

    Mode of data collection

    Other [oth]

    Research instrument

    The survey was conducted in English and Vietnamese languages. The English version is provided as related material.

    Response rate

    Response rate was 39%

    This year’s survey results were compared to the FY20 Survey, with a response rate of 56% (N=580). Comparing responses across Country Surveys reflects changes in attitudes over time, as well as changes in respondent samples, methodology, and the survey instrument itself. To reduce the influence of the latter factor, only questions with similar response scales/options were analyzed. This year’s survey saw an increased outreach to and/or response from civil society, academia, and media but a decrease from government institutions, local government, and civil society. These differences in stakeholder composition between the two years should be considered when interpreting the results of the past-year comparison analyses.

  8. World Bank: GHNP Data

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Mar 20, 2019
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    World Bank (2019). World Bank: GHNP Data [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/theworldbank/world-bank-health-population
    Explore at:
    zip(0 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 20, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    Authors
    World Bank
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Context

    The World Bank is an international financial institution that provides loans to countries of the world for capital projects. The World Bank's stated goal is the reduction of poverty. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Bank

    Content

    This dataset combines key health statistics from a variety of sources to provide a look at global health and population trends. It includes information on nutrition, reproductive health, education, immunization, and diseases from over 200 countries.

    Update Frequency: Biannual

    For more information, see the World Bank website.

    Fork this kernel to get started with this dataset.

    Acknowledgements

    https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/dataset/health-nutrition-and-population-statistics

    https://cloud.google.com/bigquery/public-data/world-bank-hnp

    Dataset Source: World Bank. This dataset is publicly available for anyone to use under the following terms provided by the Dataset Source - http://www.data.gov/privacy-policy#data_policy - and is provided "AS IS" without any warranty, express or implied, from Google. Google disclaims all liability for any damages, direct or indirect, resulting from the use of the dataset.

    Citation: The World Bank: Health Nutrition and Population Statistics

    Banner Photo by @till_indeman from Unplash.

    Inspiration

    What’s the average age of first marriages for females around the world?

  9. The World Bank

    • hosted-metadata.bgs.ac.uk
    Updated Jan 1, 2016
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    World Bank, Energy & Extractives Open Data Platform (2016). The World Bank [Dataset]. https://hosted-metadata.bgs.ac.uk/geonetwork/srv/api/records/ec5958ea-4d30-4075-969c-e5fe058225ae
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jan 1, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    British Geological Surveyhttps://www.bgs.ac.uk/
    World Bankhttp://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/w/world_bank/index.html
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    Area covered
    Earth
    Description

    The Energy & Extractives Open Data Platform is provided by the World Bank Group and is comprised of open datasets relating to the work of the Energy & Extractives Global Practice, including statistical, measurement and survey data from ongoing projects.

    Website: http://data.worldbank.org/topic/energy-and-mining

  10. i

    World Bank Country Survey 2013 - Jordan

    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 29, 2019
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    Public Opinion Research Group (2019). World Bank Country Survey 2013 - Jordan [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/4448
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Public Opinion Research Group
    Time period covered
    2013
    Area covered
    Jordan
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Bank is interested in gauging the views of clients and partners who are either involved in development in Jordan or who observe activities related to social and economic development. The World Bank Country Assessment Survey is meant to give the World Bank's team that works in Jordan, more in-depth insight into how the Bank's work is perceived. This is one tool the World Bank uses to assess the views of its critical stakeholders. With this understanding, the World Bank hopes to develop more effective strategies, outreach and programs that support development in Jordan.

    The survey was designed to achieve the following objectives: -Assist the World Bank in gaining a better understanding of how stakeholders in Jordan perceive the Bank; -Obtain systematic feedback from stakeholders in Jordan regarding: · Their views regarding the general environment in Jordan; · Their overall attitudes toward the World Bank in Jordan; · Overall impressions of the World Bank's effectiveness and results, knowledge work and activities, and communication and information sharing in Jordan; · Perceptions of the World Bank's future role in Jordan. -Use data to help inform Jordan country team's strategy.

    Geographic coverage

    National

    Analysis unit

    Stakeholder

    Universe

    Stakeholders of the World Bank in Jordan

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    In June 2013, 254 stakeholders of the World Bank in Jordan were invited to provide their opinions on the Bank's assistance to the country by participating in a country survey. Participants in the survey were drawn from the office of the President/Prime Minister/Minister; office of parliamentarian, a ministry, ministerial department, or implementation agency; consultants/ contractors working on World Bank-supported projects/programs; project management units (PMUs) overseeing implementation of a project; local government officials or staff; bilateral and multilateral agencies; private sector organizations; private foundations; the financial sector/private banks; NGOs; community-based organizations; the media; independent government institutions; trade unions; faith-based groups; academia/research institutes/think tanks; the judiciary branch; and other organizations.

    Mode of data collection

    Mail Questionnaire [mail]

    Research instrument

    The Questionnaire consists of 8 Sections:

    A. General Issues Facing Jordan: Respondents were asked to indicate whether Jordan is headed in the right direction, what they thought were the top three development priorities in Jordan, and which areas would contribute most to reducing poverty and generating economic growth.

    B. Overall Attitudes toward the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate their familiarity with the World Bank, the Bank's effectiveness in Jordan, Bank staff preparedness to help Jordan solve its development challenges, their agreement with various statements regarding the Bank's work, and the extent to which the Bank is an effective development partner. Respondents were asked to indicate the Bank's greatest values, greatest weaknesses, the most effective instruments in helping reduce poverty in Jordan, with which stakeholder groups the Bank should collaborate more, in which sectoral areas the Bank should focus most resources, to what extent the Bank should seek to influence the global development agenda, and to what reasons respondents attributed failed or slow reform efforts.

    C. World Bank Effectiveness and Results: Respondents were asked to rate the extent to which the Bank's work helps achieve development results, the extent to which the Bank meets Jordan's needs for knowledge services and financial instruments, and the Bank's level of effectiveness across thirty-four development areas, such as public sector governance/reform, energy, job creation/employment, anti-corruption, and poverty reduction.

    D. The World Bank's Knowledge: Respondents were asked to indicate the areas on which the Bank should focus its research efforts and to rate the effectiveness and quality of the Bank's knowledge work and activities, including how significant of a contribution it makes to development results and its technical quality.

    E. Working with the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate their level of agreement with a series of statements regarding working with the Bank, such as the World Bank's "Safeguard Policy" requirements being reasonable, the Bank imposing reasonable conditions on its lending, disbursing funds promptly, increasing Jordan's institutional capacity, and providing effective implementation support.

    F. The Future Role of the World Bank in Jordan: Respondents were asked to rate how significant a role the Bank should play in Jordan in the near future and to indicate what the Bank should do to make itself of greater value.

    G. Communication and Information Sharing: Respondents were asked to indicate how they get information about economic and social development issues, how they prefer to receive information from the Bank, and their usage and evaluation of the Bank's websites. Respondents were asked about their awareness of the Bank's Access to Information policy, past information requests from the Bank, and their level of agreement that they use more data from the World Bank as a result of the Bank's Open Data policy. Respondents were also asked about their level of agreement that they know how to find information from the Bank, that the Bank's websites are easy to navigate and useful, and that the Bank is responsive to information requests. Respondents were also asked to indicate whether they primarily use the Bank's country website or the Bank's main website and whether they primarily use high speed or dial-up Internet connection when visiting a World Bank website.

    H. Background Information: Respondents were asked to indicate their current position, specialization, whether they professionally collaborate with the World Bank, their exposure to the Bank in Jordan, and their geographic location.

    Response rate

    A total of 132 stakeholders participated in the survey (52% response rate).

  11. i

    World Bank Country Survey 2013 - Brazil

    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 29, 2019
    + more versions
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    Public Opinion Research Group (2019). World Bank Country Survey 2013 - Brazil [Dataset]. https://datacatalog.ihsn.org/catalog/4426
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Public Opinion Research Group
    Time period covered
    2013
    Area covered
    Brazil
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Bank Group is interested in gauging the views of clients and partners who are either involved in development in Brazil or who observe activities related to social and economic development. The World Bank Country Assessment Survey is meant to give the World Bank Group's team that works in Brazil, greater insight into how the Bank's work is perceived. This is one tool the World Bank Group uses to assess the views of its critical stakeholders. With this understanding, the World Bank Group hopes to develop more effective strategies, outreach and programs that support development in Brazil at the federal/state/municipal level. The World Bank Group commissioned an independent firm to oversee the logistics of this effort in Brazil.

    This survey was designed to achieve the following objectives: - Assist the World Bank Group in gaining a better understanding of how stakeholders in Brazil perceive the Bank;

    • Obtain systematic feedback from stakeholders in Brazil regarding: · Their views regarding the general environment in Brazil; · Their overall attitudes toward the World Bank Group in Brazil; · Overall impressions of the World Bank Group's effectiveness and results, knowledge work, and communication and information sharing in Brazil; · Perceptions of the recent trends and the World Bank Group's future role in Brazil.

    • Use data to help inform Brazil country team's strategy.

    Geographic coverage

    National

    Analysis unit

    Stakeholder

    Universe

    Stakeholders of the World Bank in Brazil

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    From June to August 2013, 10,200 stakeholders of the World Bank Group in Brazil were invited to provide their opinions on the Bank's assistance to the country by participating in a country survey. Participants in the survey were drawn from the office of the President, Prime Minister/Minister, office of a parliamentarian, ministries, ministerial departments, or implementation agencies; consultants/ contractors working on World Bank Group-supported projects/programs; project management units (PMUs) overseeing implementation of a project; state Government; municipal governments; bilateral and multilateral agencies; private sector organizations; private foundations; the financial sector/private banks; NGOs; community-based organizations; the media; independent government institutions; trade unions; academia/research institutes/think tanks; faith-based groups, the judiciary branch; and other organizations.

    Mode of data collection

    Internet [int]

    Research instrument

    The Questionnaire consists of 8 Sections:

    A. General Issues facing Brazil: Respondents were asked to indicate whether Brazil is headed in the right direction, what they thought were the top three development priorities in Brazil, and which areas would contribute most to reducing poverty and generating economic growth

    B. Overall Attitudes toward the World Bank Group: Respondents were asked to rate their familiarity with the World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, Latin American Development Bank, and the International Finance Corporation, their perceived effectiveness of these organizations in Brazil, and which of these organizations they work with the most in Brazil. They were asked to rate the Bank staff's preparedness to help Brazil solve its development challenges, their agreement with various statements regarding the Bank's work, and the extent to which the Bank is an effective development partner.

    Respondents were also asked to indicate the Bank's greatest values, greatest weaknesses, the most effective instruments in helping reduce poverty in Brazil, in which sectoral areas the Bank should focus most resources, to what extent the Bank should seek to influence the global development agenda, and to what reasons respondents attributed failed or slow reform efforts. Respondents were invited to indicate at what level (federal, state, or municipal) the World Bank Group works mostly in Brazil. They were asked if the Bank is most effective when it works in one sector or multi-sectorally. Lastly, they were asked to indicate to what extent they believe the combination of financial, knowledge, and convening services provided by the Bank meets the national development needs of Brazil.

    C. World Bank Group Effectiveness and Results: Respondents were asked to rate the extent to which the Bank's work helps achieve development results, the extent to which the Bank meets Brazil's needs for knowledge services and financial instruments, and the Bank's level of effectiveness across thirty-two development areas, such as education, public sector governance/reform, health, transport, and anti-corruption. They were also asked to what extent they believe that Brazil receives value for money from the World Bank Group's fee-based services/products.

    D. The World Bank Group's Knowledge: Respondents were asked to indicate the areas on which the Bank should focus its research efforts and to rate the effectiveness and quality of the Bank's knowledge work and activities, including how significant of a contribution it makes to development results and its technical quality. Respondents were also asked whether they read/consulted the most recent LAC Flagship Report and whether it provided useful information in their work.

    E. Working with the World Bank Group: Respondents were asked to rate their level of agreement with a series of statements regarding working with the Bank, such as the World Bank Group's "Safeguard Policy" requirements being reasonable, the Bank imposing reasonable conditions on its lending, disbursing funds promptly, increasing Brazil's institutional capacity, and providing effective implementation support.

    F. The Future Role of the World Bank Group in Brazil: Respondents were asked to rate how significant a role the World Bank Group should play in Brazil in the near future and to indicate what the Bank should do to make itself of greater value. Respondents were asked to indicate to what extent they believe the World Bank Group has moved in the right direction in terms of the focus of its work in Brazil and how significant a role international development cooperation should play in Brazil's development in the near future at the federal, state, and/or municipal level.

    G. Communication and Information Sharing: Respondents were asked to indicate how they get information about economic and social development issues, how they prefer to receive information from the Bank, and their usage and evaluation of the Bank's websites. Respondents were asked about their awareness of the Bank's Access to Information policy, whether they used/had used the World Bank Group website, and whether they accessed the Bank's social media channels. Respondents were also asked about their level of agreement that they know how to find information from the Bank, and that the Bank is responsive to information requests. Respondents were also asked to indicate what kind of e-services they are currently subscribed to.

    H. Background Information: Respondents were asked to indicate their current position, specialization, at what level (federal, state, or municipal) they primarily work at, whether they professionally collaborate with the World Bank Group, whether they worked with the International Finance Corporation in Brazil, their exposure to the Bank in Brazil, and their geographic location.

    Response rate

    A total of 200 stakeholders participated in the survey (2% response rate).

  12. e

    worldbank.org Traffic Analytics Data

    • analytics.explodingtopics.com
    Updated Oct 1, 2025
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    (2025). worldbank.org Traffic Analytics Data [Dataset]. https://analytics.explodingtopics.com/website/worldbank.org
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 1, 2025
    Variables measured
    Global Rank, Monthly Visits, Authority Score, US Country Rank, Import & Export Category Rank
    Description

    Traffic analytics, rankings, and competitive metrics for worldbank.org as of October 2025

  13. Data on Statistical Capacity

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated May 16, 2019
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    World Bank (2019). Data on Statistical Capacity [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/theworldbank/data-on-statistical-capacity
    Explore at:
    zip(159314 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 16, 2019
    Dataset provided by
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    Authors
    World Bank
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Content

    The Data on Statistical Capacity website provides information on various aspects of national statistical systems of developing countries, including a country-level statistical capacity indicator.

    Context

    This is a dataset hosted by the World Bank. The organization has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore the World Bank using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the World Bank organization page!

    • Update Frequency: This dataset is updated daily.

    Acknowledgements

    This dataset is maintained using the World Bank's APIs and Kaggle's API.

    Cover photo by Etienne Gobeli on Unsplash
    Unsplash Images are distributed under a unique Unsplash License.

  14. World Development Indicators 2020-July

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jan 25, 2021
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    Mary Chin (2021). World Development Indicators 2020-July [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/marychin/world-development-indicators-2020july
    Explore at:
    zip(61279342 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 25, 2021
    Authors
    Mary Chin
    Description

    Dataset is generated using this notebook, which * begins with the original CETS (Catalog of Economic Time Series)[1] containing 1504 indicators and updates the list according to additions, deletions and code changes released by World Bank on 1st July 2020[2]. This step produces a list of 1273 indicators, each uniquely identified by an indicator code. Indicators come coded according to the convention TT.GGG.SSSS.EE, where TT is the 2-character code for the topic, GGG the 3-character code for the general subject, SSSS the 4-character code for the specific subject and EE the 2-character code for the extension. As an example, SH.IMM.HEPB is the indicator code for HepB3 immunization, a social health (SH) indicator. * downloads the data for 1270 of the 1273 indicators; one .csv file per indicator. The 3 indicators missing (SI.POV.2DAY, SI.POV.GAP2 and TX.VAL.MRCH.R6.CD), when searched [3], are reported as 'no longer available'. * removes 434 of the 1270 indicators. Indicators are identified for removal based on the proportion of missing values. The 434 identified for removal do not have data for >20% of the 187 countries of interest [4]. We are left with 1270 - 434 = 836 indicators. * renames some countries so that country names agree with those of [4]. * extracts the most recent value (out of multiple years where data is available) for each indicator for each country. Which year's data gets taken for which country -- this info is logged in f'{OUT}/wbank01july_year.csv'. * fills any missing value with the continental median of the respective indicator. * collates the 836 indicators for 187 countries into a single 187x838 pandas dataframe. The 2 additional columns are Country/Region and continent.

    [1] http://databank.worldbank.org/data/download/site-content/WDI_CETS.xls

    [2] http://databank.worldbank.org/data/download/WDIrevisions.xls

    [3] https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/

    [4] https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19/master/csse_covid_19_data/csse_covid_19_time_series/

  15. Knoema online database - World Bank Commodity Price data

    • hosted-metadata.bgs.ac.uk
    Updated Feb 4, 2017
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    Knoema online database - World Bank Commodity Price data (2017). Knoema online database - World Bank Commodity Price data [Dataset]. https://hosted-metadata.bgs.ac.uk/geonetwork/srv/api/records/e3525896-68a8-4795-ac06-4259fa6bbad2
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Feb 4, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    World Bankhttp://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/w/world_bank/index.html
    Knoemahttp://knoema.com/
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    British Geological Survey
    Area covered
    Earth
    Description

    Knoema provides access to the World Bank Commodity Price data through an online database tool. World Bank Commodity Prices are available through Knoema on an annual/monthly basis. Data are updated continuously.

    Website: https://knoema.com/WBCPD2015Oct/world-bank-commodity-price-data-pink-sheet-monthly-update

  16. Selected Indicators from World Bank 2000-2021

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Nov 16, 2022
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    Roberto Lofaro (2022). Selected Indicators from World Bank 2000-2021 [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/robertolofaro/selected-indicators-from-world-bank-20002019/code
    Explore at:
    zip(783539 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 16, 2022
    Authors
    Roberto Lofaro
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Context

    On UN SDGs (focus:EU27) I posted on 2019-12-30 a dataset containing indicators from Eurostat, but then on 2020-04-24 (lockdown), decided to expand the dataset by searching within the Worldbank huge collection of indicators those that could be useful in my interim publications focusing on the same themes.

    Hence, selected 33 indicators (actually 34, but one is across- the GINI index estimate), and created a dataset containing those indicators, adding a sample notebook focused on EU27 to show the content.

    Eventually, both the WorldBank and Eurostat data (routinely updated by their sources) will be integrated within the digital side (that I will share online to allow others to develop their own analyses) of the book that I have been keeping on the back burner since 2015 (see below).

    UPDATE 2020-11-26: added to the series of datasets supporting my ongoing publications on sustainable digital transformation also another dataset: EU 27 Energy sources - consumption 1990-2018 - energy production, import, export by source - consumption by sector

    UPDATE 2022-11-17: extended the series to 2021, with data extracted 2022-09-16

    Content

    Shared the "raw" data as downloaded from the World Bank webite, with the following limited preparation steps:

    1. extracted the "dimensions", i.e. the Country and Indicator codes and descriptions
    2. unified the 34 CSVs (34 indicators, see below) in a single CSV, smaller after leaving just the codes for the "dimensions" and the actual values
    3. selected as period of reference 2000-2021, to focus on the XXI century (albeit 2000 data might actually refer to 1999 or earlier information).

    Selection rationale

    The criteria for selection of those 33 indicators was:

    1. should be foreseen a routine update by the source (in this case, yearly), if needed
    2. are considered non-partisan (i.e. do not represent a specific agenda, and therefor could be more acceptable as components to indicators to both political activists and business advocates)
    3. each indicator should be provided by a "domain expert source" and then collated by an acknowledged "super-partes" (again, to improve credibility and perception as non-biased)
    4. last but not least: each indicator should be useful, alone or with others, to help set an agenda for action (e.g. used the indicators on access to Internet, workforce inclusion, urbanization, etc)

    Release date and timeframe coverage

    The updated collated dataset was released on 2022-11-17, and contains data from 1999 until 2021

    "Raw" WorldBank indicators list

    The "keycode" (e.g. TX.VAL.TECH.MF.ZS) can be used on WorldBank search index to both see the metadata, the timeframe available, preview, and select other export options

    In order to enable to check on the metadata if the information might be of interested to you, this is the list of the indicators: | index | key | description | | --- | --- | --- | | 0 | CM.MKT.LCAP.GD.ZS | Market capitalization of listed domestic companies (% of GDP) | | 1 | EG.IMP.CONS.ZS | Energy imports, net (% of energy use) | | 2 | EG.USE.ELEC.KH.PC | Electric power consumption (kWh per capita) | | 3 | EN.URB.LCTY.UR.ZS | Population in the largest city (% of urban population) | | 4 | FP.CPI.TOTL.ZG | Inflation, consumer prices (annual %) | | 5 | FR.INR.LNDP | Interest rate spread (lending rate minus deposit rate, %) | | 6 | FS.AST.PRVT.GD.ZS | Domestic credit to private sector (% of GDP) | | 7 | GB.XPD.RSDV.GD.ZS | Research and development expenditure (% of GDP) | | 8 | GC.NLD.TOTL.GD.ZS | Net lending (+) / net borrowing (-) (% of GDP) | | 9 | GC.TAX.TOTL.GD.ZS | Tax revenue (% of GDP) | | 10 | GC.XPN.TOTL.GD.ZS | Expense (% of GDP) | | 11 | IC.BUS.DISC.XQ | Business extent of disclosure index (0=less disclosure to 10=more disclosure) | | 12 | IC.CRD.INFO.XQ | Depth of credit information index (0=low to 8=high) | | 13 | IC.GOV.DURS.ZS | Time spent dealing with the requirements of government regulations (% of senior management time) | | 14 | IC.LGL.CRED.XQ | Strength of legal rights index (0=weak to 12=strong) | | 15 | IC.REG.DURS.FE | Time required to start a business, female (days) | | 16 | IC.REG.DURS.MA | Time required to start a business, male (days) | | 17 | IC.TAX.TOTL.CP.ZS | Total tax and contribution rate (% of profit) | | 18 | IT.CEL.SETS.P2 | Mobile cellular subscriptions (per 100 people) | | 19 | IT.MLT.MAIN.P2 | Fixed telephone subscriptions (per 100 people) | | 20 | IT.NET.BBND.P2 | Fixed broadband subscriptions (per 100 people) | | 21 | LP.LPI.OVRL.XQ | Logistics performance index: Overall (1=low to 5=high) | | 22 | MS.MIL.XPND.GD.ZS | Military expenditure (% of GDP) | | 23 | NY.GDP.MKTP.KD.ZG | GDP growth (ann...

  17. w

    World Bank Country Survey 2012 - Benin

    • microdata.worldbank.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 14, 2014
    + more versions
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    Public Opinion Research Group (2014). World Bank Country Survey 2012 - Benin [Dataset]. https://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/1864
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 14, 2014
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Public Opinion Research Group
    Time period covered
    2012
    Area covered
    Benin
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Bank is interested in gauging the views of clients and partners who are either involved in development in BENIN or who observe activities related to social and economic development. The World Bank Country Assessment Survey is meant to give the World Bank's team that works in BENIN, more in-depth insight into how the Bank's work is perceived. This is one tool the World Bank uses to assess the views of its critical stakeholders. With this understanding, the World Bank hopes to develop more effective strategies, outreach and programs that support development in BENIN. The World Bank commissioned an independent firm to oversee the logistics of this effort in BENIN.

    The survey was designed to achieve the following objectives: - Assist the World Bank in gaining a better understanding of how stakeholders in Benin perceive the Bank; - Obtain systematic feedback from stakeholders in Benin regarding: · Their views regarding the general environment in Benin; · Their overall attitudes toward the World Bank in Benin; · Overall impressions of the World Bank's effectiveness and results, knowledge and research, and communication and information sharing in Benin; and · Perceptions of the World Bank's future role in Benin. - Use data to help inform the Benin country team's strategy.

    Geographic coverage

    National

    Analysis unit

    Stakeholder

    Universe

    Stakeholders of the World Bank in Benin

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    In April and May 2012, 687 stakeholders of the World Bank in Benin were invited to provide their opinions on the Bank's assistance to the country by participating in a country survey. Participants in the survey were drawn from among the office of the President or Prime Minister; the office of a Minister; the office of a Parliamentarian; employees of a ministry, ministerial department, or implementation agency; consultants/contractors working on World Bank supported projects/programs; project management units (PMUs) overseeing implementation of a project; local government officials or staff; bilateral agencies; multilateral agencies; private sector organizations; private foundations; financial sector/private banks; NGOs; community- based organizations; the media; independent government institutions; trade unions; faith-based groups; academia, research institutes or think tanks; and the judiciary branch.

    Mode of data collection

    Mail Questionnaire [mail]

    Research instrument

    The Questionnaire consists of 8 Sections:

    A. General Issues facing Benin: Respondents were asked to indicate whether Benin is headed in the right direction, what they thought were the top three most important development priorities, and which areas would contribute most to poverty reduction and economic growth.

    B. Overall Attitudes toward the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate their familiarity with the World Bank, the Bank's effectiveness in Benin, the extent to which the Bank meets Benin's need for knowledge services and financial instruments, the extent to which the Bank should and does seek to influence the global development agenda, their agreement with various statements regarding the Bank's work in Benin, and the extent to which the Bank is an effective development partner. Respondents were also asked to indicate the sectoral areas on which it would be most productive for the Bank to focus its resources, the Bank's greatest values and greatest weaknesses in its work, the Bank instruments that are most and least effective in reducing poverty, with which groups the Bank should work more, and to what reasons respondents attributed failed or slow reform efforts.

    C. World Bank Effectiveness and Results: Respondents were asked to rate the extent to which the Bank's work helps achieve sustainable development results in Benin and the Bank's level of effectiveness across thirty-four development areas, such as poverty reduction, anti-corruption, and economic growth.

    D. The World Bank's Knowledge: Respondents were asked to indicate the areas on which the Bank should focus its research efforts and to rate the effectiveness and quality of the Bank's knowledge/research, including how significant of a contribution the Bank's knowledge and research make to development results, the technical quality of the Bank's knowledge and research, and the Bank's effectiveness at providing linkage to non-Bank expertise.

    E. Working with the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate their level of agreement with a series of statements regarding working with the Bank, such as the World Bank safeguard policies requirements being reasonable, working with the World Bank increasing Benin's institutional capacity, and the Bank disburses funds promptly.

    F. The Future Role of the World Bank in Benin: Respondents were asked to rate how significant a role the Bank should play in Benin's development over the medium term and to indicate what the Bank should do to make itself of greater value in Benin.

    G. Communication and Information Sharing: Respondents were asked to indicate where they get information about economic and social development issues, how they prefer to receive information from the Bank, their access to the Internet, and their usage and evaluation of the Bank's website and PICs. Respondents were asked about their awareness of the Bank's Access to Information policy, past information requests from the Bank, and their level of agreement that they use more data from the World Bank as a result of the Bank's Open Data policy. Respondents were also asked their level of agreement that they know how to find information from the Bank and that the Bank is responsive to information requests.

    H. Background Information: Respondents were asked to indicate their current position, specialization, whether they professionally collaborate with the World Bank, their exposure to the Bank in Benin, and their geographic location.

    Response rate

    A total of 600 stakeholders participated in the country survey (87%).

  18. i

    World Bank Country Survey 2013 - Comoros

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    • +1more
    Updated Mar 29, 2019
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    Public Opinion Research Group (2019). World Bank Country Survey 2013 - Comoros [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/index.php/catalog/4435
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Mar 29, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Public Opinion Research Group
    Time period covered
    2013
    Area covered
    Comoros
    Description

    Abstract

    The World Bank is interested in gauging the views of clients and partners who are either involved in development in Comoros or who observe activities related to social and economic development. The World Bank Country Assessment Survey is meant to give the World Bank's team that works in Comoros, greater insight into how the Bank's work is perceived. This is one tool the World Bank uses to assess the views of its critical stakeholders. With this understanding, the World Bank hopes to develop more effective strategies, outreach and programs that support development in Comoros. The World Bank commissioned an independent firm to oversee the logistics of this effort in Comoros.

    The survey was designed to achieve the following objectives: - Assist the World Bank in gaining a better understanding of how stakeholders in Comoros perceive the Bank; - Obtain systematic feedback from stakeholders in Comoros regarding: · Their views regarding the general environment in Comoros; · Their overall attitudes toward the World Bank in Comoros; · Overall impressions of the World Bank's effectiveness and results, knowledge work and activities, and communication and information sharing in Comoros; · Perceptions of the World Bank's future role in Comoros. - Use data to help inform Comoros country team's strategy.

    Geographic coverage

    National

    Analysis unit

    Stakeholder

    Universe

    Stakeholders of the World Bank in Comoros

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    In June 2013, 150 stakeholders of the World Bank in Comoros were invited to provide their opinions on the Bank's assistance to the country by participating in a country survey. Participants in the survey were drawn from the office of the President, Prime Minister, office of a minister; office of a parliamentarian; a ministry, ministerial department, or implementation agency; consultants/ contractors working on World Bank-supported projects/programs; project management units (PMUs) overseeing implementation of a project; local government officials or staff; bilateral and multilateral agencies; private sector organizations; the financial sector/private banks; NGOs; community-based organizations; the media; independent government institutions; trade unions; academia/research institutes/think tanks; judiciary branches, and other organizations.

    Mode of data collection

    Mail Questionnaire [mail]

    Research instrument

    The Questionnaire consists of 8 Sections:

    A. General Issues Facing Comoros: Respondents were asked to indicate whether Comoros is headed in the right direction, what they thought were the top three most important development priorities in the country, and which areas would contribute most to reducing poverty and generating economic growth in Comoros.

    B. Overall Attitudes toward the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate their familiarity with the World Bank, the Bank's effectiveness in Comoros, Bank staff preparedness to help Comoros solve its development challenges, their agreement with various statements regarding the Bank's work, and the extent to which the Bank is an effective development partner. Respondents were asked to indicate the Bank's greatest values, the most effective instruments in helping reduce poverty in Comoros, with which stakeholder groups the Bank should collaborate more, to what extent the Bank should influence the global development agenda, and to what reasons respondents attributed failed or slow reform efforts.

    C. World Bank Effectiveness and Results: Respondents were asked to rate the extent to which the Bank's work helps achieve development results and build existing country systems, the extent to which the Bank meets Comoros's needs for knowledge services and financial instruments, and the Bank's level of effectiveness across forty one development areas, such as public sector governance/reform, energy, poverty reduction and law and justice.

    D. The World Bank's Knowledge: Respondents were asked to indicate how frequently they consult Bank knowledge work and activities, to rate the effectiveness and quality of the Bank's knowledge work and activities, including how significant of a contribution it makes to development results and its technical quality.

    E. Working with the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate their level of agreement with a series of statements regarding working with the Bank, such as the World Bank's "Safeguard Policy" requirements being reasonable, the Bank imposing reasonable conditions on its lending, disbursing funds promptly, increasing Comoros's institutional capacity, and providing effective implementation support.

    F. The Future Role of the World Bank in Comoros: Respondents were asked to indicate what the Bank should do to make itself of greater value, and which development areas Comoros would benefit most from the Bank playing a leading role among international partners and from other donors in Comoros.

    G. Communication and Information Sharing: Respondents were asked to indicate how they get information about economic and social development issues, how they prefer to receive information from the Bank, and their usage and evaluation of the Bank's websites. Respondents were asked about their awareness of the Bank's Access to Information policy, past information requests from the Bank, and their level of agreement that they use more data from the World Bank as a result of the Bank's Open Data policy. Respondents were also asked about their level of agreement that they know how to find information from the Bank, that the Bank's websites are easy to navigate and useful, and that the Bank is responsive to information requests. Respondents were also asked to indicate what connection they primarily use when visiting a Bank website and whether they primarily use the Bank's country website or the Bank's main website.

    H. Background Information: Respondents were asked to indicate their current position, specialization, whether they professionally collaborate with the World Bank, their exposure to the Bank in Comoros, and their geographic location.

    Response rate

    A total of 126 stakeholders participated in the survey (84% response rate).

  19. Paid In Contributions to IBRD/IDA/IFC Trust Funds

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jan 1, 2021
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    World Bank (2021). Paid In Contributions to IBRD/IDA/IFC Trust Funds [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/theworldbank/paid-in-contributions-to-ibrd-ida-ifc-trust-funds
    Explore at:
    zip(229408 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 1, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
    Authors
    World Bank
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Content

    A Recipient-executed Grant is a Trust Fund Grant that is provided to a third party under a grant agreement, and for which the Bank plays an operational role - i.e., the Bank normally appraises and supervises activities financed by these funds. This dataset provides data on the amount of grant funds committed in the course of a fiscal year and payments made out of a Trust Fund account to eligible recipients, in accordance with the legal agreements. In fulfilling its responsibilities, the World Bank as Trustee complies with all sanctions applicable to World Bank transactions. All definitions should be regarded at present as provisional and not final, and are subject to revision at any time. Data is provided at the individual Trust Fund level and is updated as of 04/02/2015. No further updates are planned for this particular dataset, please visit the Global Partnership and Trust Fund Operations website for more details: http://go.worldbank.org/GABMG2YEI0

    Context

    This is a dataset hosted by the World Bank. The organization has an open data platform found here and they update their information according the amount of data that is brought in. Explore World Bank's Financial Data using Kaggle and all of the data sources available through the World Bank organization page!

    • Update Frequency: This dataset is updated daily.

    Acknowledgements

    This dataset is maintained using Socrata's API and Kaggle's API. Socrata has assisted countless organizations with hosting their open data and has been an integral part of the process of bringing more data to the public.

    This dataset is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO

  20. w

    World Bank Group Country Survey 2023 - Turkiye

    • microdata.worldbank.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Apr 3, 2024
    + more versions
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    Public Opinion Research Group (2024). World Bank Group Country Survey 2023 - Turkiye [Dataset]. https://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/6242
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Apr 3, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Public Opinion Research Group
    Time period covered
    2023
    Area covered
    Türkiye
    Description

    Abstract

    The Country Opinion Survey in Türkiye assists the World Bank Group (WBG) in better understanding how stakeholders in Türkiye perceive the WBG. It provides the WBG with systematic feedback from national and local governments, multilateral/bilateral agencies, media, academia, the private sector, and civil society in Türkiye on 1) their views regarding the general environment in Türkiye; 2) their overall attitudes toward the WBG in Türkiye; 3) overall impressions of the WBG’s effectiveness and results, knowledge work and activities, and communication and information sharing in Türkiye; and 4) their perceptions of the WBG’s future role in Türkiye.

    Geographic coverage

    Ankara, Istanbul and other areas.

    Analysis unit

    Stakeholders of the World Bank Group in Türkiye.

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    From June 2023 to August 2023, a total of 1,151 stakeholders in Türkiye were invited to provide their opinions on the WBG’s work by participating in a Country Opinion Survey. A list of potential participants was compiled by the WBG country team and the fielding agency. Participants were drawn from the Office of the President, Prime Minister, minister, office of a parliamentarian, government institutions, local governments, bilateral/multilateral agencies, the private sector, civil society, academia, and the media. Of these stakeholders, 167 participated in the survey.

    Mode of data collection

    Internet [int]

    Research instrument

    The survey was implemented in Turkish and English languages. The English version of the questionnaire is provided as related material.

    Response rate

    The response rate was 15%

    The results of this year’s survey were compared to the FY20 Survey with a response rate of 35% (N=289). Comparing responses across Country Surveys reflects changes in attitudes over time, but also changes in respondent samples and the survey instrument itself. To reduce the influence of the latter factor, only those questions with similar response scales/options were analyzed. To address the differences in the sample composition, the data were weighted to reach comparable stakeholder composition in two years.

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World Bank (2019). World Bank: Education Data [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/theworldbank/world-bank-intl-education
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World Bank: Education Data

World Bank: Education Data (BigQuery Dataset)

Explore at:
46 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
zip(0 bytes)Available download formats
Dataset updated
Mar 20, 2019
Dataset provided by
World Bank Grouphttp://www.worldbank.org/
Authors
World Bank
License

https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

Description

Context

The World Bank is an international financial institution that provides loans to countries of the world for capital projects. The World Bank's stated goal is the reduction of poverty. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Bank

Content

This dataset combines key education statistics from a variety of sources to provide a look at global literacy, spending, and access.

For more information, see the World Bank website.

Fork this kernel to get started with this dataset.

Acknowledgements

https://bigquery.cloud.google.com/dataset/bigquery-public-data:world_bank_health_population

http://data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/ed-stats

https://cloud.google.com/bigquery/public-data/world-bank-education

Citation: The World Bank: Education Statistics

Dataset Source: World Bank. This dataset is publicly available for anyone to use under the following terms provided by the Dataset Source - http://www.data.gov/privacy-policy#data_policy - and is provided "AS IS" without any warranty, express or implied, from Google. Google disclaims all liability for any damages, direct or indirect, resulting from the use of the dataset.

Banner Photo by @till_indeman from Unplash.

Inspiration

Of total government spending, what percentage is spent on education?

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