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Panel Data

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  • Dataset

    By Fiscal Management Division (VPS/IFD/FMM)
    The Dataset of Housing Indicators aims to give users access to quality information regarding urban housing and development, including policies and best practices related to housing conditions in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico.
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  • Dataset

    By Department of Research and Chief Economist (VPS/RES/RES)
    This dataset was created to support the 2011 DIA "Development Connections: Unveiling the Impact of New Information Technologies" on the following topics: ICT for development, ICT for productive development. (Related publication only available in Spanish).
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  • Dataset

    By Infrastructure and Energy Sector (VPS/INE/INE)
    This database includes the technical efficiency scores derived from a stochastic frontier model for 63 container ports in Latin America and the Caribbean.
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  • Dataset

    By Connectivity, Markets and Finance Division (VPS/IFD/CMF)
    DigiLAC is a virtual platform created by the IDB to close the existing gaps in broadband penetration and consolidate, through innovative digital development indices, maps and infrastructure reports, key information on the challenges, opportunities and possibilities for broadband development in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC).
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  • Dataset

    By Social Sector (VPS/SCL/SCL)
    Social Indicators of Latin America and the Caribbean is a diverse dataset of indicators designed to capture social conditions in Latin America and the Caribbean. The indicators are derived from national household survey data, Censuses, and other sources covering 21 countries from 1990 to date. While the Sociómetro includes traditional global indicators, the database also includes tailor-made indicators in five areas: Demographics, Education, Labor Market, Housing, and Income, to better capture conditions in LAC. Moreover, unlike traditional aggregate indicators, the Sociómetro indicators are disaggregated by ethnicity and race (when available) and by gender, geographic residence, education, and income quintile. The indicators are not intended to serve as official data for any particular country but instead aim to provide a comparable set of social indicators for the Latin American region.
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