Tuesday, 29 April 2014

Finding Statistics

Searching for statistics for assignments or projects can sometimes be daunting and it is difficult to know where to start. Many statistics will be freely available, but it can be tricky to know which websites to look on. Often the easist thing to do is Google 'statistics' and the topic you are looking for, e.g. GDP or  employment in retail sector. However, do make sure that the statistics have been produced by a reputable source; look at the url of the website or go to the homepage to find this.

Many statistics in the UK are produced by the Office for National Statistics and cover a range of topics including economic indicators, education, population, industry etc. So if you are looking for UK statistics it is often a good idea to include the words "Office for National Statistics" or "ONS" in your search. However, the ONS do not produce statistics relating to specific companies or market research data. Market research data is commercially valuable, so there is usually a charge made for this information. Statistics of this type are available from Mintel, Passport GMID and Marketline reports on Business Source Complete. Passport GMID also has economic indicators for a large number of countries.

There is a section giving links to statistics websites on Locate, so this can be a good starting point.  From the Subject Databases link, choose 'Statistics' from the drop down list and click on 'Find Databases'. If you click on the drop-down arrow next to 'subcategories' you will see various subcategories of statistics including Industries and Companies, Economics and Finance and International. Within each section are selected websites that produce or provide access to statistics. These include;

ESDS (Economic and Social Data)
PRODCOM
Bank of England
ONS, including Consumer Price Indices, Consumer Trends, UK Balance of Payments: the Pink Book, UK National Accounts: the Blue Book
Eurostat
World Bank


Wednesday, 16 April 2014

Science Direct

Science Direct is perhaps not the first database you would think of looking in to find journal articles about business topics. However, although the name suggests that it only covers science subjects it does have a lot of articles about business, finance and economics. All of these are peer-reviewed, so the standard of research and quality of the articles is very good - excellent to use for your literature reviews!

The database is also intuitive and easy to use. I would recommend that you use the Advanced Search and you can restrict to journals only if you wish. There is a short guide available in Library Support in Moodle and more help is available via the help link on Science Direct.