15 Comments

  1. I’m losing sleep because of you guys!

  2. It would be wonderful if you could develop an arrangement with the OECD to take a large number of their indicators and add them to this format. This would be especially useful for measures of health, education, poverty, social inequality, and other measures related to the impact of globalization.

  3. Dear Bradford, a great idea and in fact just put into effect.

    OECD put their Fact Book 2008 in a Gapminder Graph only weeks ago and became the first member of Gapminder Graphs community to publish their own graph.

    You can find their Gapminder Graph on their web-page:
    http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/25/0/40679627.html

    /Staffan, Gapminder

  4. A Death Rate indicator?

    In in discussions of the severity of the AIDS crisis I always show the decrease in life expectancy in sub-Saharan Africa starting around 1990. It has occurred to me that a Death Rate indicator might show the information in an even more compelling way.

    Similarly, this indicator might be useful in discussions of the 1918 flu pandemic as well as World War II (life expectancy in France dropped from 60 years in 1939 to a low of 47 years in 1944).

    Would it be possible to include one or more indicators of this type? It would probably be best if the indicators could be tied to age ranges i.e. Deaths per Thousand for Ages 20 to 40.

    You still have one of the best sites on the net,
    Humbaba3000BC

  5. Dear Humbaba3000BC
    thanks for your suggestion (and for liking our site). Childhood mortality (for which we already have two indicators) is among the more important and sensitive measures of a country’s health, but I agree that some indicator(s) for adult mortality could be interesting to add. As you say, it could be relevant for instance for visualizing wartime mortality and epidemics, like AIDS and also the flu of 1918 which had a high mortality among adults worldwide. (Very few countries have year-to-year data on mortality back in 1918 however.) The UN has estimated global child mortality back to 1950, but puts less focus on adult mortality and the dataset I found only has this from 1990 and later ( http://data.un.org/Data.aspx?q=adult+mortality&d=WHO&f=inID%3aMBD16 ). The Human Mortality Database http://www.mortality.org has earlier data but only for countries with civil registration. Do you have any suggestion of additional datasets for mortality?
    /Klara

  6. Klara,

    Thank you for your response. Unfortunately, I do not know of any other databases which might provide information on death rates. I looked at the human mortality database and found that it had a lot of the information. Unfortunately, the data was not in a Gapminder-friendly form.

    If I run across a website that has the necessary information I will let you know.

    Humbaba3000BC

  7. Index of indicators?

    I really appreciate all the new indicators that have been added to GapMinder. Unfortunately, I am now having trouble remembering where each indicator is located. Is there an index of the hierarchy of indicators?

    Thank you for your help,
    Humbaba3000BC

  8. Humbaba3000BC,
    This is indeed an important feature that we must find a better way of solving as we add more and more indicators. For now, the best, but clearly very imperfect way, is to go to the page “indicators in gapminder world” (you find it in the right side on the top of this page):
    http://www.gapminder.org/world/blog/?page_id=5

    There you can find a link called “download indicator list to excel”. If you download that list you get the present list of indicators we have, and the headings of each indicator (in the columns “menue level 1″ and menue level 2″.

    Once you have the list you can use the search functions in excel to find the indicators you want, and see under what headings in the graph you find them.

    Hopefully we come up with some better way of searching for indicators in the not too distant future.

    Regards,
    mattias, Gapminder

  9. Hello,

    Interesting pages!
    I would like to see indicators related to transport, freight and passenger traffic. Such as number on cars, trucks, amount of passenger and freight kilometres with´different transport methods etc etc. Only ones I was able to find was aviation indicators.

    Regards Teijo

  10. Is there any indicators depicting what pecentage of main religions are in each of the world’s countries is does this also inpact life expectancy and income levels there is a video that has me concerned and I would like to see if it may be true http://perfectlyhuman.multiply.com/video/item/8

  11. I found this site which has data but not sure if this can be made in to an indicator or not http://www.adherents.com/

  12. Curious when the Human Development Index (HDI) may be added to Gapminder?

  13. Thanks for writing this great blog I really enjoyed.

  14. I have lived in Brazil and Sweden. Brazil is violent and wealth is unevenly distributed. Sweden is safe and wealth is less unevenly distributed. I would like to see how strong the correlation between these two factors are for all countries. On the y-axis e.g. homocide per capita. On the x-axis e.g. the ratio between the income of the 20% richest and the 20% poorest. I have found neither of the indicators in the gapminder list.

    Dear Florian, you are right, so far there are no crime or violence data in Gapminder World. So that comparison cant be made, however we do have data on inequality, just click the sub-menu “Poverty and inequality” in any of the axis. I also promise to look into the violence data.

    /Staffan, Gapminder

  15. I have a few indicator suggestions:

    religion (most useful as a different colour for every religion, using the dominant religion of each country that has one)

    immigration and emigration

    railroads (length, length per capita, new construction, passenger kilometres, passenger kilometres per capita, the same for freight)

    Thank you for a wonderful site.

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