Image:
A stylized black-and-white digital illustration of a globe, surrounded
by interconnected data points, lines, and financial charts. The image represents the complexity of global trade, industry classification, and economic systems, visually symbolizing the structure of economic taxonomies.
Content:
From ISIC to GICS: The Evolution of Economic Classification Standards Across Regions
Understanding the world economy requires structure. Industry classifications define how businesses, markets, and entire economies are categorized, influencing trade, investment, and policy decisions.
This working paper explores the historical development and modern application of economic classification systems, from global frameworks like ISIC to market-driven structures such as GICS.
Chapters:
1. Introduction – Why classifying economies matters
2. From Ancient Trade to AI Support – The evolution of classification
3. ISIC as the Global Standard – The backbone of economic classification
4. GICS & Market Systems – How financial markets define industries
5. Resources – Key datasets, research, and institutional frameworks
Economic classification is more than a technicality—it shapes how we measure growth, allocate capital, and analyze markets. This paper lays the foundation for further research into the intersection of taxonomy, geo-spatial frameworks, and market-driven classifications.
Hashtags:
#Economy #IndustryClassification #GICS #ISIC #Finance #EconomicResearch #GlobalTrade #Markets #UN #100DaysOfTrade
Day 39:
Taxonomy of the world economy. Sounds odd? Maybe. But classifying industries, markets and assets is how we make sense of global trade. I compared some major, like #ISIC or #GICS and start a working paper:
y.lab.nrw/evoecoclass (DOI)
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#100DaysOfTrade #EconomicResearch #MSCI #SPDJI