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37 APIs with this tag

Moldova Inflation & CPI API

Official consumer-price inflation for the Republic of Moldova — sourced live from the National Bureau of Statistics of Moldova via its public PxWeb statbank (tables PRE012600, PRE012200 and PRE012800). The cpi endpoint returns the latest reported month with headline year-on-year inflation and the month-on-month price change. The series endpoint returns the monthly history of year-on-year and month-on-month inflation, parameterised by the number of months. The groups endpoint breaks the latest month down across the major divisions — food goods, non-food goods and services — each with its year-on-year rate, showing where price pressure sits. The core endpoint returns Moldova's core-inflation measures, computed by excluding volatile components such as food, energy and regulated prices, each with year-on-year and month-on-month change — the gauges central banks watch for underlying trend. All figures are published directly by the statistics bureau, not modelled, and refreshed from source behind a short server-side cache with keep-warm. Ideal for macro and emerging-market dashboards, CIS and EU-candidate economics trackers, cost-of-living and monetary-policy tools, and fintech needing a clean structured inflation feed for a market the big aggregators rarely cover at monthly resolution. Live keyless upstream. 5 endpoints.

api.oanor.com/moldova-cpi-api

Moldova Foreign Trade API

Official foreign-trade statistics for the Republic of Moldova — exports, imports and the trade balance — sourced live from the National Bureau of Statistics of Moldova via its public PxWeb statbank (table EXT015000), all values in millions of US dollars. The trade endpoint returns the latest reported month with exports, imports, the trade balance and the export-to-import cover ratio. The series endpoint returns the monthly history of exports, imports and balance, parameterised by the number of months. The partners endpoint breaks the latest month down by partner-country group — total, CIS countries, the European Union and the rest of the world — each with its exports, imports and balance, showing where Moldova trades. The annual endpoint returns full-year totals for exports, imports and balance across recent years. Figures are published directly by the statistics bureau, not modelled, and refreshed from source with a short server-side cache and keep-warm. Ideal for macro and trade dashboards, emerging-market and CIS/EU economics trackers, supply-chain and current-account analysis, and fintech needing a clean structured trade feed for a market the big aggregators rarely cover at monthly resolution. Live keyless upstream. 5 endpoints.

api.oanor.com/moldova-trade-api

Åland Consumer Price Index API

Official consumer-price-index and inflation data for the Åland Islands — the autonomous, Swedish-speaking, euro-area region of Finland — sourced live from Statistics and Research Åland (ÅSUB), the regional statistics authority, via its public PxWeb API (table KO010). The overall endpoint returns the latest headline CPI level (index base 2025 = 100) together with month-on-month and year-on-year change. The series endpoint returns the full monthly history of the headline index with monthly and annual change, parameterised by the number of months. The divisions endpoint breaks the basket down across the thirteen COICOP groups — food, alcohol & tobacco, clothing, housing & utilities, furnishings, health, transport, communication, recreation & culture, education, restaurants & hotels, miscellaneous and personal care — each with its index level and annual change. The drivers endpoint ranks those same divisions by their annual impact in percentage points, showing exactly which categories are pushing Åland inflation up or down. Figures are published directly by ÅSUB, not modelled or estimated, and are refreshed from source. Ideal for macro and regional-economics dashboards, cost-of-living and salary tools, Nordic and euro-area inflation trackers, and fintech that needs a clean, structured CPI feed for a market the big aggregators ignore. Live keyless upstream, short server-side cache. 5 endpoints.

api.oanor.com/aland-stats-api

Sweden Municipal Statistics API

Swedish municipal and regional statistics straight from Kolada — the open database run by the Council for the Promotion of Municipal Analyses (RKA) — no key, read live. Kolada holds roughly 6,000 key performance indicators tracking the finances and service quality of all 290 Swedish municipalities and 21 regions: personnel costs, school results, elderly care, waiting times, environment, demographics and much more. The kpis endpoint lists and searches the indicator catalogue by title. The kpi endpoint returns the full metadata of a single indicator (its definition, operating area and source). The municipalities endpoint lists every municipality and region with its official code. The data endpoint returns a chosen indicator's full annual value series for a given municipality, with the latest value highlighted. The meta endpoint documents the API. Live data from Kolada v3, lightly cached. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves Swedish public-sector statistics; for the krona exchange rate or national CPI use an FX / national-statistics API.

api.oanor.com/kolada-api

Mongolia Statistics API

Official Mongolian inflation statistics straight from the National Statistics Office of Mongolia (NSO) via its 1212.mn PxWeb open-data service — no key, read live. The cpi endpoint returns the headline national Consumer Price Index (Overall index, base 2023=100) for the latest month with the index level plus month-on-month and year-on-year inflation, computed from the official series. The cpi/series endpoint returns the historical monthly CPI index and year-on-year rate over the last N months, ready to chart. The cpi/groups endpoint breaks the latest CPI down across all thirteen COICOP groups (food, housing, transport and so on) with index and annual change for each. The cpi/annual endpoint gives the annual-average CPI and average inflation for every year on record. The meta endpoint documents the source. Live data from Mongolia NSO PxWeb, lightly cached. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves Mongolian national price statistics; for the tugrik exchange rate use an FX / central-bank API.

api.oanor.com/mongolia-stats-api

North Macedonia Statistics API

Official North Macedonian inflation statistics straight from the State Statistical Office (MAKStat) via its ASKdata-style PxWeb open-data service — no key, read live. The cpi endpoint returns the headline Consumer Price Index inflation for the latest month — the month-on-month and year-on-year percentage changes (ECOICOP version 2 classification) — derived from the official ratio table. The cpi/series endpoint returns the historical monthly MoM and YoY series over the last N months, ready to chart. The cpi/groups endpoint breaks the latest year-on-year inflation down across all thirteen COICOP main groups (food, housing, transport and so on). The cpi/group endpoint returns the full MoM and YoY history for any single COICOP group by its code. The meta endpoint documents the COICOP group codes and source. Live data from MAKStat PxWeb, lightly cached. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves North Macedonian national price statistics; for the denar exchange rate use an FX / central-bank API.

api.oanor.com/macedonia-stats-api

Kosovo Statistics API

Official Kosovo economic statistics straight from the Kosovo Agency of Statistics (ASK) via its ASKdata open-data service — no key, read live. The cpi endpoint returns the headline Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP, all items, base 2015=100) for the latest month with the index level plus month-on-month and year-on-year inflation, computed from the official series. The cpi/series endpoint returns the historical monthly HICP index and year-on-year rate over the last N months, ready to chart. The cpi/groups endpoint breaks the latest HICP down across all twelve COICOP main groups (food, housing, transport and so on) with index and annual change for each. The cpi/annual endpoint gives the annual-average HICP and average inflation for every year since 2002. The meta endpoint documents the source. Live data from ASKdata PxWeb, lightly cached. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves Kosovo national price statistics; for the euro exchange rate use an FX API (Kosovo uses the euro).

api.oanor.com/kosovo-stats-api

Philippines Statistics API

Official Philippine economic statistics straight from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) via its OpenSTAT open-data service — no key, read live. The cpi endpoint returns the headline Consumer Price Index (all items, all income households, base 2018=100) for the latest month with the index level plus month-on-month and year-on-year inflation, computed from the official series. The cpi/series endpoint returns the historical monthly CPI index and year-on-year rate over the last N months, ready to chart. The cpi/divisions endpoint breaks the latest CPI down across all thirteen COICOP divisions (food, housing, transport and so on) with index and annual change for each. The cpi/regions endpoint gives the latest All-Items CPI for the National Capital Region and every administrative region and province, so you can see where prices bite hardest. The meta endpoint documents the source. Live data from PSA OpenSTAT, lightly cached. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves Philippine national statistics; for the peso exchange rate or PSE equities use an FX / stock-exchange API.

api.oanor.com/philippines-stats-api

Malaysia Statistics API

Official Malaysian economic statistics straight from the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DOSM) via its OpenDOSM open-data API — no key, read live. The cpi endpoint returns the headline Consumer Price Index (overall, all items, base 2010=100) for the latest month with the index level plus the month-on-month and year-on-year inflation rates, computed from the official series. The cpi/series endpoint returns the historical monthly CPI index and year-on-year rate over the last N months, ready to chart. The cpi/divisions endpoint breaks the latest CPI down across all thirteen COICOP divisions (food, housing, transport and so on) with the index for each. The dataset endpoint is a thin live gateway to any OpenDOSM data-catalogue id, returning its most recent rows, so you can reach DOSM's wider catalogue (labour, trade, population and more) beyond inflation. The meta endpoint documents the source. Live data from OpenDOSM, lightly cached. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves Malaysian national statistics; for the ringgit exchange rate or Bursa Malaysia equities use an FX / stock-exchange API.

api.oanor.com/malaysia-stats-api

UK Statistics API

Official UK economic statistics straight from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) beta API — no key, read live. The cpi endpoint returns CPIH, the UK's lead measure of consumer price inflation (Consumer Prices Index including owner occupiers' housing costs, index 2015=100), for the latest month with the index level plus the month-on-month and year-on-year rates, computed from the official series. The cpi/series endpoint returns the historical monthly CPIH index and year-on-year rate over the last N months, ready to chart. The cpi/divisions endpoint breaks the latest CPIH down across all twelve COICOP divisions (food, housing, transport, recreation and so on) with the index for each. The datasets endpoint lists the ONS dataset catalogue (hundreds of datasets covering prices, GDP, the labour market, population, trade and more) so you can discover what is available. The meta endpoint documents the source. Live data from the ONS beta CMD API, lightly cached. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves UK national statistics; for the sterling exchange rate or the Bank of England base rate use an FX / central-bank API.

api.oanor.com/uk-stats-api

US Labor Statistics API

Official US economic indicators straight from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) public time-series API — no key, read live. The cpi endpoint returns the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U, all items, series CUUR0000SA0) for the latest month with the index level plus the month-on-month and year-on-year inflation rates, computed from the official series. The unemployment endpoint returns the seasonally-adjusted US unemployment rate (series LNS14000000) for the latest month plus the trailing year. The indicators endpoint returns a curated dashboard of headline US figures in one call — CPI, core CPI, the unemployment rate, the producer price index, average hourly earnings and total nonfarm employment — each with its latest value and period. The series endpoint is a thin live gateway to any BLS series by its id, returning the data points and computed changes, opening up the full BLS catalogue (prices, employment, wages, productivity). Annual-average rows are labelled and excluded from period maths. Live data from BLS, heavily cached because the public API is rate-limited. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves US national statistics; for the US dollar exchange rate or Treasury yields use an FX / Treasury API.

api.oanor.com/bls-api

Singapore Statistics API

Official Singapore economic statistics straight from Statistics Singapore (SingStat) and its TableBuilder service — no key, read live. The cpi endpoint returns the Singapore Consumer Price Index (All Items, base 2024 = 100) for the latest month with the headline index plus the month-on-month and year-on-year changes, computed from the official index series. The cpi/series endpoint returns the historical monthly CPI index and year-on-year rate over the last N months, ready to chart. The cpi/groups endpoint breaks the latest CPI down across every published category (food and its sub-items, housing, transport and so on) with index and annual change for each. The table endpoint is a thin live gateway to any SingStat TableBuilder resource: pass a resource id and it returns each series with its latest value and point count, opening up SingStat's whole catalogue (GDP, population, trade, labour) beyond inflation. The meta endpoint documents the source. Live data from SingStat TableBuilder, lightly cached. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves Singapore national statistics; for the SGD exchange rate or policy rate use a central-bank / FX API.

api.oanor.com/singapore-stats-api

Brazil Statistics API

Official Brazilian economic statistics straight from IBGE (Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística) and its SIDRA service — no key, read live. The ipca endpoint returns the IPCA, Brazil's official consumer price index, for the latest month: the headline index (base December 1993 = 100), the month-on-month change, the year-to-date change and the all-important twelve-month inflation rate that the Banco Central targets. The ipca/series endpoint returns the historical monthly IPCA index, monthly change and twelve-month rate over the last N months, ready to chart. The aggregate endpoint is a thin live gateway to any SIDRA aggregate: pass an aggregate id, one or more variable ids, a period selector and a territorial level and it returns the parsed series — opening up thousands of IBGE tables (population, GDP, employment, industry, retail) beyond inflation. The regions endpoint lists Brazil's 27 federative units with their region grouping. Live data from IBGE SIDRA, lightly cached; decimal values parsed to numbers. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves Brazilian national statistics; for the BRL exchange rate or policy rate use a central-bank / FX API.

api.oanor.com/brazil-stats-api

Denmark Statistics API

Official Danish economic statistics straight from Statistics Denmark's Statbank (api.statbank.dk), the national statistical agency. The cpi endpoint returns the Danish Consumer Price Index for the latest month — the headline index (base 2015=100), the month-on-month change and the year-on-year inflation rate — for the all-items total or any six-digit COICOP commodity group. The cpi/series endpoint returns the historical monthly CPI index and year-on-year inflation for a chosen group over the last N months, ready to chart. The cpi/groups endpoint breaks the latest CPI down across all twelve COICOP divisions (food, housing, transport, recreation and so on) with index and annual change for each, so you can see where inflation is concentrated. The table endpoint exposes the metadata (variables and their values) of any Statbank table by id, so you can discover the full Danish statistics catalogue. Live data is read directly from Statbank and updated as Statistics Denmark publishes; Danish decimal commas are normalised to points. Live. 5 endpoints. This serves Danish national price statistics; for euro-area or other countries use the matching national-statistics API.

api.oanor.com/denmark-stats-api

Statistics Sweden (SCB) API

A gateway to the official Statistics Sweden (SCB) PxWeb data service. Read the latest headline Consumer Price Index and fetch the latest time-series observations for any of the thousands of SCB statistics tables by table path and dimension selections — consumer prices, population, the labour market, national accounts, housing and much more. Every observation carries its reference period, and values always resolve to the latest published release, so there are no dates to hard-code. Built for Swedish macro research, CPI and inflation tracking, and SEK currency or rates models that need authoritative national statistics. Distinct from our OECD, Statistics Canada, ABS and Statistics Norway feeds, and from central-bank FX feeds: this surfaces the official SCB data service for Sweden.

api.oanor.com/scb-api

Statistics Norway (SSB) API

A gateway to the official Statistics Norway (SSB) PxWeb data service. Read the latest headline Consumer Price Index (2015=100) and fetch the latest time-series observations for any of the thousands of SSB statistics tables by table id and dimension selections — consumer prices, the producer price index, GDP, the labour market, population, housing and much more. Every observation carries its reference period, and values always resolve to the latest published release, so there are no dates to hard-code. Built for Norwegian macro research, CPI and inflation tracking, and NOK currency or rates models that need authoritative national statistics. Distinct from our OECD cross-country indicators, Statistics Canada and ABS feeds, and from central-bank FX feeds: this surfaces the official SSB data service for Norway.

api.oanor.com/ssb-api

Australian Bureau of Statistics API

A gateway to the official Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) SDMX data service. Read the latest headline Consumer Price Index, browse and search the 1,200-plus ABS statistical dataflows by id or name, and fetch the latest observations for any ABS series by its dataflow id and SDMX series key with as many recent periods as you need. Every observation carries its reference period, and values always resolve to the latest published release, so there are no dates to hard-code. Built for Australian macro research, CPI and inflation tracking, and AUD currency or rates models that need authoritative national statistics. Distinct from our OECD cross-country indicators and Statistics Canada feed: this surfaces the official ABS data service for Australia.

api.oanor.com/abs-api

Statistics Canada Economic Data API

Key Canadian economic indicators from the official Statistics Canada Web Data Service. Pull the Consumer Price Index, the seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate, monthly real GDP, the Bank of Canada policy rate and the national population estimate — look up a single indicator, read a full country snapshot with all of them at once, or fetch the raw time series for any Statistics Canada vector by its id (with as many recent periods as you need). Every value carries the indicator label, its unit and the exact reference period, and always resolves to the latest published observation, so there are no dates to hard-code. Built for dashboards, macro research and CAD currency or rates models that need authoritative Canadian data. Distinct from market and FX feeds, and from our OECD cross-country indicators: this surfaces official Statistics Canada figures.

api.oanor.com/statcan-api

OECD Economic Indicators API

Key macroeconomic indicators for the 38 OECD member countries, sourced from the official OECD SDMX data service. Pull the harmonised unemployment rate, the consumer price index and the long-term (10-year government bond) interest rate for any member country, look up a single indicator for one country, or read a full country snapshot with all indicators at once. Every value carries the indicator label, its unit and the exact period it refers to, and always resolves to the latest published observation — no date juggling. Coverage spans Australia to the United States, with the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, France and every other OECD member in between. Built for dashboards, macro research and currency or rates models that need authoritative, comparable cross-country economic data. Distinct from market and FX feeds: this surfaces official OECD statistics.

api.oanor.com/oecd-api

CPI Inflation Rate API

The headline consumer-price inflation print for every major economy, broken into its core and its drivers, live from the OECD's official price statistics — no key. Consumer-price inflation is the single most-watched macro number on earth: the gauge every central bank targets, the thing that sets the real value of wages, debts and savings, and a number whose surprises move bonds, currencies and equities within seconds. This API serves the year-on-year national CPI the way it is actually reported, for ~50 economies — and crucially it does not stop at the headline. For each economy it also serves the core rate (all items excluding food and energy, the measure policymakers really steer by), plus the food, energy and services rates themselves. That decomposition tells you whether a reading is a temporary food/energy shock or a stickier, demand-driven core problem: headline above core means volatile food/energy are pushing prices up; headline below core means they are dragging the print down while underlying inflation stays hot. The board endpoint ranks economies by headline inflation with core alongside; core ranks by the core rate; country gives one economy's full breakdown with the headline-vs-core read. Each reading carries its own month and discontinued series are filtered out, so the board is genuinely current. This is the realised-inflation cut — distinct from the inflation calculator (arithmetic from a rate you supply, not live data), from consumer inflation expectations (a survey of what households think prices will do, not what they did), and from unit labour costs and wages. Rates are percent year-on-year; figures are monthly.

api.oanor.com/cpiinflation-api

Unit Labour Costs & Wages API

Unit labour costs, wages and productivity — the labour-cost side of inflation and competitiveness, on one comparable screen, from the OECD's official productivity statistics as an API, live, no key. Wages, productivity and unit labour costs are bound by a simple identity: unit labour cost growth is roughly wage growth minus productivity growth. When pay rises faster than output per worker, the extra cost has to go somewhere — into prices or into margins — which is why unit labour costs are one of the indicators central banks watch most closely for home-grown (second-round) inflation, and why a country whose unit labour costs run ahead of its trading partners loses competitiveness. The OECD harmonises and seasonally adjusts the figures so they are comparable across economies. This API serves the year-on-year growth of all three: unit labour costs, labour compensation per employee (the clean per-worker wage measure) and labour productivity (GDP per person employed). The board endpoint ranks every economy by unit-labour-cost growth — where labour-cost pressure is building fastest — with wages and productivity alongside. The wages endpoint ranks by wage growth, the gauge of pay pressure. The country endpoint gives one economy's three figures with the wage-minus-productivity decomposition of its unit labour costs. Each reading carries its own quarter and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The labour-cost / wage-inflation cut — distinct from the realised-inflation feeds, the employment and unemployment boards (counts and rates, not costs), and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are quarterly year-on-year, in percent.

api.oanor.com/labourcosts-api

Consumer Inflation Expectations API

What households in each economy expect for prices and for the wider economy — the OECD consumer surveys as an API, live, no key. Every month consumers are asked whether they expect prices to rise faster or slower over the year ahead, and whether they think the general economic situation will improve or worsen. The OECD harmonises the answers into balances — the share answering up/better minus the share answering down/worse, on a scale around zero. Consumer inflation expectations are one of the most closely watched soft indicators in central banking: if households start expecting higher inflation, they bring forward purchases and demand higher wages, which can make inflation self-fulfilling, so policymakers track whether expectations stay anchored. The economic-situation balance is the household read on where the economy is heading, and it leads consumer spending. The inflation endpoint ranks every economy by its consumer inflation-expectations balance — where households most expect prices to climb. The economy endpoint ranks by the economic-situation outlook. The country endpoint gives one economy's inflation and economic-situation balances side by side with the month-on-month change. Each reading carries its own month and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The consumer-survey / inflation-expectations cut — distinct from the composite Business & Consumer Confidence board (which gives only the headline confidence index, not the inflation-expectations component), the manufacturing business-survey board, the realised-inflation feeds, and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Balances are in percentage points; figures are monthly.

api.oanor.com/consumersurvey-api

Business Tendency Survey API

What manufacturers in each economy are actually reporting about their order books, output, prices, exports and hiring — the OECD business tendency surveys as an API, live, no key. Every month national statistics offices ask factory managers whether order books are full or thin, whether they expect to raise or cut production, whether they plan to put prices up, whether export demand is strong, and whether they will hire or fire. The OECD harmonises the answers into balances — the share answering up/good minus the share answering down/bad, on a scale around zero (positive = expansion/optimism, negative = contraction/pessimism). These survey balances are pure soft data that move before the hard numbers, which is why they are watched as one of the earliest reads on the manufacturing cycle — and the selling-price balance, in particular, is a leading signal of pipeline inflation. This API exposes the manufacturing survey components themselves, not just the composite confidence index: order books (current demand), production expectations, selling-price expectations, employment expectations and export order books. The country endpoint returns one economy's full survey panel with the month-on-month change in each balance. The orderbooks endpoint ranks every economy by its order-books balance (who has the fullest order books right now). The sellingprices endpoint ranks by the selling-price balance — the pipeline-inflation gauge, where firms are planning the biggest price rises. Each reading carries its own month and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The business-survey-components cut — distinct from the composite Business & Consumer Confidence board (which gives only the headline index), the leading-indicator board, and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Balances are in percentage points; figures are monthly.

api.oanor.com/businesssurvey-api

GDP by Sector API

Which parts of each economy are actually driving growth — real GDP growth broken down by economic sector, from the OECD's official Quarterly National Accounts as an API, live, no key. Headline GDP growth is one number, but it hides the story: whether the expansion is being carried by services, by industry, by construction or by agriculture, and which sector is dragging. Gross value added by economic activity decomposes real GDP into those sectors, so you can see, for any economy, that (say) services are growing while industry is in recession. It is the read economists and equity-sector investors use to understand the shape of the cycle, not just its size. The OECD harmonises and seasonally adjusts the real, chain-linked-volume figures so they are comparable across countries. This API computes the quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year growth of real gross value added in four sectors — services, industry (excluding construction), construction and agriculture. The country endpoint gives one economy's sector breakdown side by side and flags the leading and lagging sector. The services endpoint ranks every economy by services value-added growth (the largest sector in advanced economies); the industry endpoint ranks by industry value-added growth (the most cyclical). Each reading carries its own quarter and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The sectoral-GDP / value-added cut — distinct from the headline GDP-growth board (the total), the monthly industrial-production index (a different measure, industry only), the annual IMF World Economic Outlook database, and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are quarterly, in percent.

api.oanor.com/gdpsector-api

Employment Growth API

How fast the number of people in work is growing in each economy, on one comparable screen — total employment growth from the OECD's official Quarterly National Accounts as an API, live, no key. Employment growth is the jobs number: the change in the total count of people employed, the demand-side companion to the unemployment rate. The two can move independently — employment can keep rising while the unemployment rate holds flat if the labour force is growing too — so the jobs print is watched in its own right as a read on how much hiring the real economy is doing. The OECD harmonises and seasonally adjusts the figures so they are genuinely comparable across countries. This API computes the two growth rates people quote — quarter-on-quarter (the latest quarter's pace) and year-on-year (versus the same quarter a year earlier) — from the OECD's total-employment count. The board endpoint ranks every economy by its year-on-year employment growth, so you can see where hiring is strongest and where jobs are being shed. The momentum endpoint ranks by the latest quarter-on-quarter move. The country endpoint gives one economy's employment growth with a plain-language read. Each reading carries its own quarter and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The jobs / labour-demand cut — distinct from the harmonised unemployment-rate board (this is the count of people in work, not the share out of work), the leading-indicator and GDP boards, the annual IMF World Economic Outlook database, and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are quarterly, in percent.

api.oanor.com/employment-api

Investment Growth API

How fast each economy's businesses and governments are investing in new capital, on one comparable screen — real gross fixed capital formation growth from the OECD's official Quarterly National Accounts as an API, live, no key. Gross fixed capital formation — investment in machinery, buildings, infrastructure and equipment — is the most cyclical and forward-looking component of GDP: firms only commit to new plant and projects when they are confident about demand, so investment turns down before recessions and surges first in recoveries. Its year-on-year change is one of the cleanest reads on the business cycle, and a swing factor that moves the currency and the capex-exposed parts of the equity market. The OECD harmonises and seasonally adjusts the real, chain-linked-volume figures so they are genuinely comparable across countries. This API serves the two growth rates people quote — quarter-on-quarter (the latest quarter's pace) and year-on-year (versus the same quarter a year earlier) — for real investment. The board endpoint ranks every economy by its year-on-year investment growth, so you can see where capex is booming and where it is collapsing. The momentum endpoint ranks by the latest quarter-on-quarter move. The country endpoint gives one economy's investment growth with a plain-language read. Each reading carries its own quarter and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The capital-investment / capex cut — distinct from the headline GDP-growth board (this isolates the investment component), the consumer-demand and trade boards, the annual IMF World Economic Outlook database, and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are quarterly, in percent.

api.oanor.com/investmentgrowth-api

Trade Growth API

How fast each economy's exports and imports are growing, on one comparable screen — real trade growth from the OECD's official Quarterly National Accounts as an API, live, no key. Trade is the external engine of an economy: exports are foreign demand for what a country makes, imports are domestic demand for what the world makes, and the gap between how fast the two are growing is the net-trade contribution to GDP — a swing factor that moves the currency and the current account. Export-led economies live and die by the export number; the OECD harmonises and seasonally adjusts the real, chain-linked-volume trade flows so the figures are genuinely comparable across countries. This API serves the two growth rates people quote — quarter-on-quarter (the latest quarter's pace) and year-on-year (versus the same quarter a year earlier) — for real exports and real imports of goods and services. The board endpoint ranks every economy by its export growth, with imports alongside, so you can see whose external demand is booming and whose is fading. The imports endpoint ranks by import growth — a read on domestic demand pulling in goods. The country endpoint gives one economy's export and import growth with a plain-language read of whether net trade is improving (exports outpacing imports) or dragging. Each reading carries its own quarter and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The external-sector / trade-growth cut — distinct from the headline GDP-growth board (this isolates the trade component), the annual IMF World Economic Outlook database, and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are quarterly, in percent.

api.oanor.com/trade-api

GDP Growth API

How fast each economy is actually growing, on one comparable screen — real GDP growth from the OECD's official Quarterly National Accounts as an API, live, no key. Real GDP growth is the single most-watched macroeconomic number there is: it is the headline measure of whether an economy is expanding or in recession, it sets the backdrop for every central-bank decision, and the quarterly print moves bond, currency and equity markets. The OECD harmonises and seasonally adjusts the national accounts so the figures are genuinely comparable across countries. This API serves the two growth rates people actually quote — the quarter-on-quarter change (the latest quarter's pace) and the year-on-year change (growth versus the same quarter a year earlier), both for real, chain-linked-volume GDP. The board endpoint ranks every economy by its year-on-year growth, with the quarter-on-quarter move alongside, so you can see who is booming and who is shrinking. The momentum endpoint ranks by the latest quarter-on-quarter move — the freshest read on the cycle. The country endpoint gives one economy's GDP growth with a plain-language read (two consecutive negative quarters is the classic technical-recession marker). Each reading carries its own quarter and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The headline GDP-growth cut — distinct from the annual IMF World Economic Outlook database (a yearly figure and forecast, not the live quarterly print), the leading-indicator and confidence boards (forward-looking soft data), and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are quarterly, in percent.

api.oanor.com/gdp-api

Retail Sales API

How much consumers in each economy are actually spending, and which way the high street is turning — the OECD retail trade volume as an API, live from the OECD's official statistics, no key. Retail trade volume is the headline monthly read on consumer demand: it measures the real, inflation-adjusted volume of goods sold by retailers, and its year-on-year change tells you whether households are opening their wallets or pulling back. Consumer spending is the largest part of most economies, so the retail print moves markets and feeds straight into GDP nowcasts — and the latest month-on-month move is the bit traders react to first. The OECD publishes a seasonally-adjusted retail-trade-volume index for each economy; this API turns it into the numbers people use — the year-on-year and month-on-month growth of retail sales. The board endpoint ranks every economy by its year-on-year retail growth, so you can see where consumers are spending and where demand is fading. The momentum endpoint ranks by the latest month-on-month move — who is accelerating or rolling over right now. The country endpoint gives one economy's retail growth, year-on-year and month-on-month, with a plain-language read. Each reading carries its own period and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The consumer-demand / retail hard-data cut — distinct from the industrial-production board (the supply side, factory output), the leading-indicator and confidence boards (soft survey data), and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are monthly, in percent.

api.oanor.com/retailsales-api

Industrial Production API

How much each economy's factories, mines and utilities are actually producing, and which way output is turning — the OECD industrial production index as an API, live from the OECD's official statistics, no key. The industrial production index is one of the headline monthly hard-data prints: it measures the real volume of output across industry (mining, manufacturing and utilities, excluding construction), and its year-on-year change is a direct read on whether the real economy is expanding or contracting — it moves markets and feeds straight into GDP nowcasts. Manufacturing, the largest and most cyclical part, is broken out separately. The OECD publishes a seasonally-adjusted production-volume index for each economy; this API turns it into the number people use — the year-on-year and month-on-month growth of industrial output. The board endpoint ranks every economy by its industrial-production growth (industry excluding construction), with manufacturing alongside, so you can see where factories are humming and where they are stalling. The manufacturing endpoint ranks by manufacturing output growth on its own. The country endpoint gives one economy's industrial and manufacturing growth, year-on-year and month-on-month. Each reading carries its own period and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The industrial-output / hard-data cut — distinct from the leading-indicator and confidence boards (soft, survey-based, forward-looking), the annual IMF database, and the generic data aggregator. Figures are monthly, in percent.

api.oanor.com/industrialproduction-api

OECD Unemployment API

The monthly unemployment rate of every major economy on one comparable screen — the OECD harmonised unemployment rates as an API, live from the OECD's official statistics, no key. Each country measures joblessness slightly differently; the OECD harmonises them onto the same definition (the share of the labour force without work, available and actively looking) and seasonally adjusts them, so the numbers are genuinely comparable side by side. Unemployment is one of the two hard data points — with inflation — that move central banks and markets, and the monthly print, and which way it is turning, is what gets traded. The board endpoint returns the headline (15+) seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate for every economy the OECD tracks (and the aggregates — the euro area, the OECD, the EU), ranked from the tightest labour market to the loosest, each with its month-on-month change and whether the rate is rising (loosening) or falling (tightening). The youth endpoint does the same for the 15-24 age group — youth unemployment runs far higher and is watched as a social and structural gauge. The country endpoint puts the headline and youth rate together for one economy with its rank and recent direction. Each reading carries its own period and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The labour-market / unemployment-rate cut — distinct from the annual IMF World Economic Outlook database (which carries unemployment as a yearly figure and forecast, not the live monthly print), the inflation and bond-yield boards, and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are monthly, in percent of the labour force.

api.oanor.com/unemployment-api

OECD Leading Indicators API

Which economies are heading into expansion, slowdown, downturn or recovery — the OECD Composite Leading Indicators (CLI) as an API, live from the OECD's official statistics, no key. The CLI is designed to flag turning points in the business cycle six to nine months ahead: it leads GDP, it does not follow it. It is built to oscillate around 100 — above 100 means activity is above its long-term trend, below 100 means below trend, and the direction (rising or falling) gives the momentum. Combining level and direction gives the classic four-phase business-cycle clock macro traders position around: above 100 and rising is Expansion, above 100 and falling is Downturn, below 100 and falling is Slowdown, below 100 and rising is Recovery. The board endpoint returns every economy the OECD tracks (and the aggregates — G7, G20, OECD, NAFTA, the major European and Asian groups) with its current amplitude-adjusted CLI, the month-on-month change and its business-cycle phase, ranked. The country endpoint returns one economy's CLI — its latest reading, the month-on-month change and its phase. The phase endpoint groups every economy into the four phases of the cycle clock, so you can see at a glance who is accelerating and who is rolling over. The leading-indicator / business-cycle cut — distinct from the generic multi-provider data aggregator (which fetches any raw series but is not a curated, interpreted CLI board), from the government-bond-yield board, and from inflation and central-bank-rate APIs. Figures are monthly; this is the forward-looking macro lens.

api.oanor.com/leadingindicators-api

Residential Property Prices API

How house prices are moving across the world's economies, read live from the Bank for International Settlements' Selected Residential Property Prices dataset. For roughly 60 countries the BIS publishes a quarterly residential property price index — both nominal and real (inflation-adjusted) — together with its year-on-year change. The latest endpoint returns every country's most recent reading at once — the nominal and real index plus the nominal and real year-on-year growth — sortable by nominal or real YoY so you instantly see which housing markets are heating up and which are cooling once you strip out inflation. The country endpoint returns a single country's latest reading; the history endpoint returns its quarterly index time series (nominal and real) so you can chart a market over time. Countries are given as ISO-2 codes (US, DE, GB, JP) or common names (xm is the euro area). The nominal index is the headline price level; the real index is deflated by consumer prices, so a negative real YoY means prices are falling after inflation even when the nominal index still rises. This is the real-estate / property-price macro data-cut — distinct from the FX-rate, central-bank, yield-curve, commodity and equity-index APIs in the catalogue. Live source, no key required upstream, nothing stored.

api.oanor.com/houseprices-api

Big Mac Index API

The Economist's Big Mac Index — "burgernomics" — as an API: how over- or under-valued the world's currencies are, measured by the price of a Big Mac. The same burger costing different amounts across countries reveals purchasing-power-parity (PPP) misalignment in exchange rates. The index endpoint returns the latest release for every country — the local Big Mac price, its US-dollar price at the market exchange rate, and the raw and GDP-adjusted over/under-valuation of that currency against a chosen base (USD, EUR, GBP, JPY or CNY). The country endpoint returns one country's full history — the valuation trend over every release since 2000. The extremes endpoint returns the most over-valued and most under-valued currencies in the latest release. A positive valuation means the currency is over-valued versus the base; negative means under-valued; the GDP-adjusted figure corrects for cheaper labour in poorer countries. This is a PPP / currency-valuation data-cut — a fundamental gauge, not a live FX tick — distinct from the spot-rate, central-bank and conversion APIs in the catalogue. Live from the open dataset, no key on the upstream, nothing stored.

api.oanor.com/bigmac-api

Gini Index (Income Inequality) API

Income-inequality data for every country as an API — the World Bank Gini index, the standard measure of how evenly income is distributed. The coefficient runs from 0 (perfect equality) to 100 (one person holds all income); a higher number means a more unequal society. For each of 170+ countries the API returns the latest available value, the full year-by-year history and the all-time minimum and maximum, enriched with the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code and flag emoji. Look a country up by name or code, RANK countries by their latest inequality (the most or least equal in the world), search, or list them all. The reference an economics dashboard, data-journalism piece or research tool needs. Distinct from countrystats-api (area, population, life expectancy) — this is the inequality series specifically, with per-country history. Served from memory — always fast.

api.oanor.com/gini-api

Eurostat API

Official European Union statistics as an API, powered by Eurostat — the statistical office of the EU. Eurostat publishes harmonised data across every EU and EFTA country and region: population and demography, GDP and national accounts, employment and unemployment, inflation (HICP), trade, energy, migration, education, health and thousands more datasets. This API wraps Eurostat's JSON-stat dissemination service into clean, decoded rows, and adds friendly named indicators so you don't have to learn dataset codes. /v1/indicator?indicator=population&geo=DE&year=2023 returns a named statistic — population, gdp, gdp_per_capita, unemployment, inflation or employment — for one or more countries (2-letter codes such as DE, FR, IT, or aggregates like EU27_2020 and EA20) and one or more years, with no need to know the underlying dataset or dimension codes. /v1/data?dataset=demo_pjan&geo=DE&sex=T&age=TOTAL&time=2023 gives direct access to any of Eurostat's thousands of datasets by its code, with arbitrary dimension filters passed as query parameters — every dataset has its own dimensions (geo, time, sex, age, unit, na_item, coicop and so on). Both endpoints decode Eurostat's JSON-stat format automatically: single-value dimensions are lifted into a `fixed` context block, and each row carries the dimensions that actually vary (with both a human-readable label and the underlying code) alongside the numeric value, the dataset label and the last-update date. Ideal for economic dashboards, country comparison tools, research, data journalism and policy analysis. Country codes are 2-letter ISO; aggregates include EU27_2020 and EA20. Data © European Union, free to reuse with attribution.

api.oanor.com/eurostat-api

DBnomics API

Economic data from 90+ official providers as one API, powered by DBnomics. DBnomics aggregates the public statistics of the IMF, OECD, Eurostat, the European Central Bank, the World Bank, the BIS, the US Federal Reserve and Bureau of Labor Statistics, national statistics offices and dozens more — millions of time series — into a single, consistent interface. List the data providers; search datasets across every provider at once by keyword; read a dataset's details and its dimensions (the codes you combine to pick a series); and fetch a series with its full observations (period and value) plus the latest data point. The typical flow is search → dataset → series. Ideal for macroeconomic and financial dashboards, data-science and research pipelines, fintech and economics apps, and anyone who needs GDP, inflation, unemployment, interest-rate, trade or monetary series from authoritative sources. Data is free and open.

api.oanor.com/dbnomics-api