1.EconBiz (www.econbiz.de/) is an excellent resource for economic and business studies. It offers the option of searching all free access journals or only open access material. 2.EconLit (www.aeaweb.org/econlit/) Run by the American Economic Association, EconLit is a collection of more than 120 years of economic research. Here you will find plenty of reputable resources. It does require a membership, butyou can get limited access to the website without one. 3.EconStor (www.econstor.eu/) EconStor offers more than 128,000 open access documents in the field of economics and allows you to search by author, year, document type, or collection. 4.EDGAR (www.sec.gov/edgar/search-and-access) Search The U.S.Securities and Exchange Commission has a collection of information intended to educate investors on the conditions of the stock market. The resource is called EDGAR, and it provides access to more than 21 million findings, including full texts of filings published in the past four years. 5.IDEAS (ideas.repec.org/)Boasting its status as "the largest bibliographic database dedicated to economics and available freely on the Internet," IDEAS indexes over 2.2 million items, more than 2 million of which can be freely downloaded. 6.Inomics (inomics.com/) Although primarily a job-search tool, this site also allows you to search for recent articles by subject. Not only can you do your research here, but you can also sign up and customize a newsfeed that will deliver you articles of interest. 7.National Bureau of Economic Research(www.nber.org/) has compiled tons of research into an easy-to-use, searchable website. The research is conducted by over 1,400 economics university professors.