This is a list of countries by real GDP per capita growth rate. These numbers are corrected for inflation but not for purchasing power parity.[2] This list is not to be confused with gross national income per capita growth[3] or the real GDP growth.
below -3.0 -3.0 to -2.1 -2.0 to -1.1 -1.0 to -0.1 0.0 to 0.9 | 1.0 to 1.9 2.0 to 2.9 3.0 to 3.9 4.0+ no data |
List of countries and dependencies
editThe annual real GDP per capita growth in % according to the World Bank is shown for last available year:[1]
Country | GDP per capita growth (annual %) |
Year |
---|---|---|
Afghanistan | -8.6 | 2022 |
Albania | 4.6 | 2023 |
Algeria | 2.5 | 2023 |
American Samoa | 3.5 | 2022 |
Andorra | 1.1 | 2023 |
Angola | -2.2 | 2023 |
Antigua and Barbuda | 3.3 | 2023 |
Argentina | -2.4 | 2023 |
Armenia | 8.8 | 2023 |
Aruba | 10.6 | 2022 |
Australia | 0.6 | 2023 |
Austria | -1.8 | 2023 |
Azerbaijan | 1.4 | 2023 |
Bahamas | 2.0 | 2023 |
Bahrain | 1.6 | 2023 |
Bangladesh | 4.7 | 2023 |
Barbados | 4.4 | 2023 |
Belarus | 4.4 | 2023 |
Belgium | 0.2 | 2023 |
Belize | 3.1 | 2023 |
Benin | 3.6 | 2023 |
Bermuda | 6.7 | 2022 |
Bhutan | 4.5 | 2022 |
Bolivia | 1.1 | 2023 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 2.4 | 2023 |
Botswana | 1.0 | 2023 |
Brazil | 2.4 | 2023 |
Brunei Darussalam | 0.6 | 2023 |
Bulgaria | 2.4 | 2023 |
Burkina Faso | 0.4 | 2023 |
Burundi | -0.0 | 2023 |
Cabo Verde | 4.2 | 2023 |
Cambodia | 4.3 | 2023 |
Cameroon | 1.3 | 2023 |
Canada | -1.9 | 2023 |
Cayman Islands | 4.3 | 2022 |
Central African Republic | -2.0 | 2023 |
Chad | 1.0 | 2023 |
Chile | 0.1 | 2023 |
China | 5.3 | 2023 |
Colombia | 0.2 | 2023 |
Comoros | 0.9 | 2023 |
DR Congo | 5.1 | 2023 |
Republic of the Congo | -0.4 | 2023 |
Costa Rica | 4.5 | 2023 |
Croatia | 3.1 | 2023 |
Cuba | 2.2 | 2022 |
Curaçao | 9.6 | 2022 |
Cyprus | 3.6 | 2022 |
Czech Republic | -2.2 | 2023 |
Denmark | 1.1 | 2023 |
Djibouti | 5.2 | 2023 |
Dominica | 4.3 | 2023 |
Dominican Republic | 1.4 | 2023 |
East Timor | -15.6 | 2023 |
Ecuador | 1.3 | 2023 |
Egypt | 2.2 | 2023 |
El Salvador | 3.0 | 2023 |
Equatorial Guinea | -7.9 | 2023 |
Eritrea | 6.7 | 2011 |
Estonia | -4.2 | 2023 |
Eswatini | 4.0 | 2023 |
Ethiopia | 3.8 | 2023 |
Faroe Islands | 5.0 | 2022 |
Fiji | 7.3 | 2023 |
Finland | -1.5 | 2023 |
France | 0.4 | 2023 |
French Polynesia | 3.7 | 2022 |
Gabon | 0.3 | 2023 |
The Gambia | 2.7 | 2023 |
Georgia | 6.1 | 2023 |
Germany | -1.1 | 2023 |
Ghana | 1.0 | 2023 |
Greece | 2.7 | 2023 |
Greenland | 0.8 | 2021 |
Grenada | 4.2 | 2023 |
Guam | 4.3 | 2022 |
Guatemala | 2.0 | 2023 |
Guinea | 4.6 | 2023 |
Guinea-Bissau | 2.1 | 2023 |
Guyana | 32.2 | 2023 |
Haiti | -3.0 | 2023 |
Honduras | 2.0 | 2023 |
Hong Kong | 0.6 | 2023 |
Hungary | -0.4 | 2023 |
Iceland | 1.0 | 2023 |
India | 6.7 | 2023 |
Indonesia | 4.3 | 2023 |
Iran | 4.2 | 2023 |
Iraq | -5.1 | 2023 |
Ireland | -5.7 | 2023 |
Isle of Man | 3.6 | 2021 |
Israel | -0.1 | 2023 |
Italy | 1.2 | 2023 |
Ivory Coast | 3.9 | 2023 |
Jamaica | 2.3 | 2023 |
Japan | 2.4 | 2023 |
Jordan | 2.2 | 2023 |
Kazakhstan | 3.7 | 2023 |
Kenya | 3.4 | 2023 |
Kiribati | 2.5 | 2023 |
South Korea | 1.3 | 2023 |
Kosovo | 4.0 | 2023 |
Kuwait | -3.2 | 2023 |
Kyrgyzstan | 4.3 | 2023 |
Laos | 2.3 | 2023 |
Latvia | -0.4 | 2023 |
Lebanon | 2.4 | 2023 |
Lesotho | -0.2 | 2023 |
Liberia | 2.5 | 2023 |
Libya | -2.8 | 2023 |
Lithuania | -1.7 | 2023 |
Luxembourg | -3.4 | 2023 |
Macau | 78.2 | 2023 |
Madagascar | 1.5 | 2023 |
Malawi | -1.0 | 2023 |
Malaysia | 2.6 | 2023 |
Maldives | 4.5 | 2023 |
Mali | 2.1 | 2023 |
Malta | 1.4 | 2023 |
Marshall Islands | 2.2 | 2023 |
Mauritania | 0.7 | 2023 |
Mauritius | 7.1 | 2023 |
Mexico | 2.5 | 2023 |
Micronesia | -0.1 | 2023 |
Moldova | 2.9 | 2023 |
Monaco | 11.8 | 2022 |
Mongolia | 5.5 | 2023 |
Montenegro | 6.2 | 2023 |
Morocco | 0.2 | 2022 |
Mozambique | 2.1 | 2023 |
Myanmar | 0.3 | 2023 |
Namibia | 2.7 | 2023 |
Nauru | -0.2 | 2023 |
Nepal | 0.8 | 2023 |
Netherlands | -0.9 | 2023 |
New Caledonia | 4.0 | 2022 |
New Zealand | -1.4 | 2023 |
Nicaragua | 3.1 | 2023 |
Niger | -1.2 | 2023 |
Nigeria | 0.4 | 2023 |
North Macedonia | 2.1 | 2023 |
Northern Mariana Islands | -29.3 | 2020 |
Norway | -0.6 | 2023 |
Oman | -0.2 | 2023 |
Pakistan | -1.9 | 2023 |
Palau | 0.4 | 2023 |
Panama | 5.9 | 2023 |
Papua New Guinea | 0.8 | 2023 |
Paraguay | 3.5 | 2023 |
Peru | -1.4 | 2023 |
Philippines | 3.9 | 2023 |
Poland | 0.5 | 2023 |
Portugal | 1.1 | 2023 |
Puerto Rico | 1.0 | 2023 |
Qatar | 3.9 | 2022 |
Romania | 2.1 | 2023 |
Russia | -2.2 | 2022 |
Rwanda | 5.8 | 2023 |
Samoa | 6.4 | 2023 |
San Marino | 9.3 | 2021 |
São Tomé and Príncipe | -2.4 | 2023 |
Saudi Arabia | -2.2 | 2023 |
Senegal | 1.1 | 2023 |
Serbia | 3.2 | 2023 |
Seychelles | 3.3 | 2023 |
Sierra Leone | 1.2 | 2023 |
Singapore | -3.7 | 2023 |
Sint Maarten | 2.7 | 2023 |
Slovakia | 1.7 | 2023 |
Slovenia | 1.2 | 2023 |
Solomon Islands | 0.7 | 2023 |
Somalia | 0.0 | 2023 |
South Africa | -0.3 | 2023 |
South Sudan | -10.6 | 2015 |
Spain | 1.2 | 2023 |
Sri Lanka | -1.7 | 2023 |
Saint Kitts and Nevis | 3.2 | 2023 |
Saint Lucia | 3.0 | 2023 |
Collectivity of Saint Martin | 6.9 | 2021 |
St. Vincent and Grenadines | 6.3 | 2023 |
Sudan | -3.5 | 2022 |
Suriname | 1.2 | 2023 |
Sweden | -0.7 | 2023 |
Switzerland | -0.1 | 2023 |
Syria | -1.3 | 2021 |
Tajikistan | 6.3 | 2023 |
Tanzania | 1.5 | 2022 |
Thailand | 1.7 | 2023 |
Togo | 4.0 | 2023 |
Tonga | -2.8 | 2022 |
Trinidad and Tobago | 1.8 | 2023 |
Tunisia | -0.4 | 2023 |
Turkey | 4.1 | 2023 |
Turkmenistan | 4.7 | 2019 |
Turks and Caicos Islands | 0.4 | 2023 |
Tuvalu | 3.1 | 2023 |
Uganda | 2.3 | 2023 |
Ukraine | -17.1 | 2022 |
United Arab Emirates | 2.6 | 2023 |
United Kingdom | -0.7 | 2023 |
United States of America | 2.0 | 2023 |
Uruguay | 0.4 | 2023 |
Uzbekistan | 3.8 | 2023 |
Vanuatu | -0.2 | 2023 |
Venezuela | -5.0 | 2014 |
Vietnam | 4.3 | 2023 |
U.S. Virgin Islands | 3.3 | 2021 |
Palestine | -7.7 | 2023 |
Yemen | -1.7 | 2018 |
Zambia | 3.0 | 2023 |
Zimbabwe | 2.8 | 2023 |
Sources
edit- ^ a b "GDP per capita growth (annual %), World Bank Group, accessed august 2024".
- ^ GDP: GDP per capita, annual growth rate Archived 2007-10-15 at the Wayback Machine from EarthTrends of World Resources Institute
- ^ "World Bank Open Data". World Bank Open Data (in Latin). Retrieved 6 August 2024.
External links
edit- Economics focus: Grossly distorted picture From Mar 13th 2008, The Economist print edition. Sub-title "If you look at GDP per head, the world is a different—and, by and large, a better—place"