- World Bank Open Data: https://data.worldbank.org/
- The World Bank Open Data is a statistical database that works for the collection and compilation of the demographics, developmental, and geospatial data from the World Bank’s data catalogue. This includes the socioeconomic, and demographic data in the context of analysis concerning budgeting and expenditures by country.
- Word Bank Database of Political Institutions https://datacatalog.worldbank.org/dataset/wps2283-database-political-institutions
- The World Bank Database of Political Institutions organizes the institutional and electoral results of the world. In addition, the archive provides information about the measures of checks and balances, tenure and stability of the government, identification of party affiliation and ideology, fragmentation of opposition within parties, and more. Expanding over 180 countries worldwide, this database spans from 1975-2015.
- World Inequality Database: https://wid.world/
- The World Inequality Database is a research tool that aims to provide open and convenient access to the most extensive available data concerning historical evolution of the world’s distribution of income and wealth in and between countries. Originally created as the World Top Incomes Database (WTID), the database moved into sharing inequalities existing across the world in hopes to bring both attention and aid to those who have been neglected for decades.
- International Labor Organization: https://ilostat.ilo.org/
- The International Labor Organization provides users with a comprehensive international dataset across a wide range of labor-related topics. Through micro data process, an automated data collection, an annual ILOSTAT questionnaire, projections, and estimates, the ILO provides information about types of labor, labor supply, competitiveness, poverty and inequality, working conditions, and more.
- Comparative Welfare Entitlements Dataset: http://cwed2.org/
- The Comparative Welfare Entitlements Dataset (CWED) is an informational collection about the structures and generosity of social insurance benefits within 33 countries around the world. Starting from 2004 and extending to 2017, the CWED provides systematic data on features of social insurance programs, unemployment, sickness, minimum pensions, coverage policies, rates, and more.