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This R package is an easier alternative to use the data set of Brazilian Institute for Applied Economic Research (Ipea). It allows directly access to the macroeconomic, financial and regional databases. This package helps you to find the series you’re looking for without the need to go on the Ipeadata website to find it and downloading it. This is a practical way to use the Ipea databases on R.
install.packages("ipeadatar")
library(ipeadatar)
library(devtools)
install_github("gomesleduardo/ipeadatar")
library(ipeadatar)
Functions | Outputs |
---|---|
available_countries | List with available countries |
available_series | List with available series |
available_subjects | List with available subjects |
available_territories | List with available territorial divisions |
ipeadata | Returns a database about the requested series |
metadata | Returns a metadata about the requested series |
search_series | List with searched series |
This function will show the available series in the Ipeadata site. One of the output variable of this function is the code
. So, this is one way of getting the code
for the the functions metadata
and ipeadata
.
To simplify, this function will help you to find the series you’ve been searching for faster. Let’s say that you are looking for databases about nominal exchange rate (or taxa de câmbio nominal, in Portuguese). All you have to do is to type a keyword on the parameter terms
:
::search_series(terms = 'Taxa de câmbio nominal', fields = c('name')) ipeadatar
Or maybe, you’re looking for all active series:
::search_series(terms = 'Active', fields = c('status')) ipeadatar
Let’s say you want information about IPCA (Broad Consumer Price Index – official inflation index in Brazil) and you’ve found that the code
of this series is 'PRECOS12_IPCA12'
. Therefore, that’s how you get the metadata of this series:
metadata('PRECOS12_IPCA12')
With the help of this function, we get the values of the IPCA. Its frequency is monthly. So, let’s see with the help of the following graphic:
Now, you search for information about the homicide rate (per 100.000 inhabitants) in Brazilian states from 1995 to 2010. This is what you should do:
<-
homic_rate1995 ipeadata("THOMIC") %>%
filter(uname == "States" & date == "1995-01-01")
<-
homic_rate2000 ipeadata("THOMIC") %>%
filter(uname == "States" & date == "2000-01-01")
<-
homic_rate2005 ipeadata("THOMIC") %>%
filter(uname == "States" & date == "2005-01-01")
<-
homic_rate2010 ipeadata("THOMIC") %>%
filter(uname == "States" & date == "2010-01-01")
Let’s see a graphic with this information:
Finally, you looking for the evolution of the average years of schooling for people 25 years of age or older in Brazilian Mesoregions between the 90’s and 00’s:
<-
avg_yschol1991 ipeadata("MEDUCA") %>%
filter(uname == "Mesoregions" & date == "1991-01-01")
<-
avg_yschol2000 ipeadata("MEDUCA") %>%
filter(uname == "Mesoregions" & date == "2000-01-01")
Luiz Eduardo S. Gomes is currently a Ph.D. student in Statistics at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ – Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil) and data analysis assistant at Ipeadata. His Github page and institutional e-mail.↩︎
Jessyka A. P. Goltara is currently a M.Sc. candidate in Computer Science at Federal Fluminense University (UFF – Niterói, RJ, Brazil) and research assistant at Ipea. Her Github page and institutional e-mail.↩︎
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
Health stats visible at Monitor.