The globe of economic complexity dynamically maps out the entire world production of goods to create an economic landscape of countries around the globe.This project was built with WebGL and needs it to run properly, your current web browser is not compatible.See get.webgl.org to fix this issue or enjoy the following teaser:

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The Globe of Economic Complexity

The globe of economic complexity dynamically maps out the entire world production of goods to create an economic landscape of countries around the globe.

The original Atlas of Economic Complexity



For any given country, The Atlas shows which products are produced and exported; The Atlas can then use this information to suggest products a country could begin manufacturing in order to fuel economic growth.

It is available at: The Globe is built upon The Atlas of Economic Complexity, a powerful interactive tool that enables users to visualize a country’s total trade, track how these dynamics change over time and explore growth opportunities for more than a hundred countries worldwide.For any given country, The Atlas shows which products are produced and exported; The Atlas can then use this information to suggest products a country could begin manufacturing in order to fuel economic growth.It is available at: http://atlas.cid.harvard.edu

The Center for international development (CID)



Learn more here: CID is a university-wide research center housed at the Harvard Kennedy School.Learn more here: http://www.cid.harvard.edu/

Associated Paper



Read our poster This project will be featured at the 2015 IEEE VIS conference in Chicago.Read our poster here

Data Used

Technology



The code can be viewed in our This visualization was built with webGL, a new graphics library that enables to create new 3D worlds in the browser. We used Three.js, a javascript library to streamline creating and editing 3D objects.The code can be viewed in our Github repository

Contact

Aknowledgements

We would like to thank Marcela Escobari, Ricardo Hausmann, Gus Wezerek, Tim Cheston and Greg Shapiro for their insight and support. Icons: Cube Divisions, Earth, World by Juan Pablo Bravo, Molecule by Swaty Shah, Coins by Ramakrishna Venkatesan, Subsystem by Alex Tai from the Noun Project