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  2. Comparison of Canadian and American economies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Canadian_and...

    In 2023 the population of Canada was 39,566,248 (Q1, 2023) [1] compared to 36,991,981 in 2021 [2] while the population of the United States was 333,287,557 in 2022, [3] almost nine times larger than Canada. The United States GDP was $24.8 trillion in 2021. [4] The United States has the largest economy globally and Canada ranks 9th at US$2.015 ...

  3. Economic consequences of population decline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_consequences_of...

    As the table below shows, even though Japan's population declined 2.0% during the period 2012-2022, its per capita GDP, a rough approximation of the overall productivity of the Japanese people, rose by about 7.5%, a much greater increase than the 2.0% decrease in its population. As a result its GDP still grew by 4.7%, and the increase in GDP ...

  4. Gross domestic product - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_Domestic_Product

    An increase of 113.560 million. This being indicative of the production level in the country being higher than that of national production. On the other hand, the case with Armenia is the opposite with its GDP in 2023 being lower than its GNI by 3.85 billion. This shows us countries receive investments and foreign aid from abroad.

  5. China raises its estimate for the size of its economy in 2023

    www.aol.com/news/china-raises-estimate-size...

    The estimate for total economic activity, or GDP, in 2023 for the world's second largest economy was increased by about 2.7% to 129.4 trillion yuan ($17.7 trillion), based on an economic census ...

  6. Measures of national income and output - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measures_of_national...

    GDP is the mean (average) wealth rather than median (middle-point) wealth. Countries with a skewed income distribution may have a relatively high per-capita GDP while the majority of its citizens have a relatively low level of income, due to concentration of wealth in the hands of a small fraction of the population. See Gini coefficient.

  7. GDP density - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GDP_density

    Gridded GDP Density of the World 1990 and 2025. GDP density is a measure of economic activity by area. It is expressed as gross domestic product per square kilometer and can be calculated by multiplying GDP per capita of an area by the population density of that area. Amongst other uses it demonstrates the effects of geography on economy. [1]

  8. Economic growth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_growth

    In 1957 South Korea had a lower per capita GDP than Ghana, [33] and by 2008 it was 17 times as high as Ghana's. [34] The Japanese economic growth has slackened considerably since the late 1980s. Productivity in the United States grew at an increasing rate throughout the 19th century and was most rapid in the early to middle decades of the 20th ...

  9. Income distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_distribution

    In economics, income distribution covers how a country's total GDP is distributed amongst its population. [1] Economic theory and economic policy have long seen income and its distribution as a central concern. Unequal distribution of income causes economic inequality which is a concern in almost all countries around the world. [2] [3]