GQ-1d

On these websites/portals, are infographics/visualizations or other similar tools used to simplify data access and analysis? If yes, please provide the necessary links and details in the comment/citation.
 * a. Yes
 * b. No

Guidelines
GQ-1d asks the researcher to list any government websites or portals where infographics/visualizations or other similar tools used to simplify data access and analysis are present. For example, in South Africa the Vulekamali portal is a project by the National Treasury which contains visualizations of the consolidated budget Summary, by departments budget, by division of revenue and by infrastructure budget distribution. (See for example https://vulekamali.gov.za/2022-23/national/departments/basic-education/). Other countries that have developed portals that include fiscal visualization and graphics include: Brazil’s Transparency Portal, which presents line graphs, bar graphs, pie charts, and visual maps of electronic invoices, public expenditure, public revenue, annual budget, transferred resources, resources transferred by location of beneficiary, among other information. (https://portaldatransparencia.gov.br/orcamento and https://portaldatransparencia.gov.br/transferencias). Additionally, United States Department of the Treasury, https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/ Fiscal Data portal) is a one-stop shop for federal financial data that uses charts, exhibits, and figures.

What counts?
We accept both static (e.g. Indonesia) and dynamic (e.g. Thailand and Georgia) images and graphs that make the presentation of data more visually accessible and understandable.

We also give credit for using infographics and visualizations even if they are part of an existing document like a citizens budget. This should not apply to the standard tables and graphs that may appear in other budget documents, though. The purpose has to be presenting information in a way that makes it more easily accessible and understandable.