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The figures are from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) World Economic Outlook Database, unless otherwise specified. [1] This list is not to be confused with the list of countries by real GDP per capita growth, which is the percentage change of GDP per person recalculated according to the changing number of the population of the country.
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 .
At exchange rates, the global economic output expanded by US$32.0 trillion from 2000 to 2010. At purchasing power parity , the global economic output expanded by US$39.1 trillion from 2000 to 2010. IMF's economic outlook for 2010 noted that banks faced a "wall" of maturing debt, which presents important risks for the normalization of credit ...
Since 2000, India is known to have one the fastest growing economies in the world. benedek / Getty Images. Germany. Total GDP: $4.07 trillion. GDP per capita: $48,432. Main export: Cars.
Peru's been touted as one of South America's fastest-growing economies in years, and the country's economic strides have lifted it to become the 39th largest economy in the world, according to IMF ...
India is “easily” the fastest-growing economy in the world, IMF executive director Krishnamurthy Subramanian said, as the country’s third-quarter GDP growth blew past analysts’ estimates ...
The first list includes estimates compiled by the International Monetary Fund's World Economic Outlook, the second list shows the World Bank's data, and the third list includes data compiled by the United Nations Statistics Division. The IMF's definitive data for the past year and estimates for the current year are published twice a year in ...
This is a list of estimates of the real gross domestic product growth rate (not rebased GDP) in European countries for the latest years recorded in the CIA World Factbook. The list includes all members of the Council of Europe and Belarus apart from those countries with GDP growth estimates older than 2014.