In 2020, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) made the eLibrary platform free to all users as part of its long-standing commitment to supporting research and public awareness.
It is a free and easy-to-use portal that provides access to the complete IMF research and data. Besides the traditional IMF statistical databases, the portal offers the Annual Report on Exchange Arrangements and Exchange Restrictions (AREAER), which tracks the exchange rate and trade regimes of all members of the International Monetary Fund, and the Macroprudential Policy Survey, a database that include information on categories of measures that may be used to contain systemic risk in line with the definition of macroprudential policy as “the use of primarily prudential tools to limit systemic risk”.
Are you interested in learning how to get started with the IMF eLibrary? Take a look at the official Startup Guide.
You can find the IMF eLibrary listed in the A-to-Z Database list on the library website. If you want to know more about statistics and economic resources, get in touch with our Reference Librarians at referenceservices@johncabot.edu.
The International Monetary Fund eLibrary is a free and easy-to-use portal to IMF research and data. Today the eLibrary holds more than 21,000 publications, reports, and working papers—and is constantly expanding. The IMF is a respected authority on global economic information and its eLibrary puts cutting-edge analysis at your fingertips.
In 2020, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) made the eLibrary platform free to all users as part of its long-standing commitment to supporting research and public awareness.
It is a free and easy-to-use portal that provides access to the complete IMF research and data. Besides the traditional IMF statistical databases, the portal offers the Annual Report on Exchange Arrangements and Exchange Restrictions (AREAER), which tracks the exchange rate and trade regimes of all members of the International Monetary Fund, and the Macroprudential Policy Survey, a database that include information on categories of measures that may be used to contain systemic risk in line with the definition of macroprudential policy as “the use of primarily prudential tools to limit systemic risk”.
Are you interested in learning how to get started with the IMF eLibrary? Take a look at the official Startup Guide.
You can find the IMF eLibrary listed in the A-to-Z Database list on the library website. If you want to know more about statistics and economic resources, get in touch with our Reference Librarians at referenceservices@johncabot.edu.