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Countries by real GDP growth rate in 2024 (IMF WEO database 2024) This article includes lists of countries and dependent territories sorted by their real gross domestic product growth rate; the rate of growth of the total value of all final goods and services produced within a state in a given year compared with the previous year.
According to the IMF, the country's per capita GDP (PPP) was at $53,059 (2024). [5] [26] Due to a volatile currency exchange rate, Japan's nominal GDP as measured in American dollars fluctuates sharply. Being a founding member of the G7 and an early member of the OECD, Japan was the first country in Asia to achieve developed country status.
The article lists the GDP of Japanese prefectures in main fiscal years, where all figures are obtained from the Statistics Bureau of Japan (日本統計局).Calculating GDP of Japanese prefectures is based on Japanese yen (JP¥), for easy comparison, all the GDP figures are converted into United States dollar (US$) or Renminbi (CN¥) according to current annual average exchange rates.
Japan's economy grew at a 0.1% annual pace in the last quarter of the year, just barely avoiding two consecutive quarters of contraction, or a technical recession. It expanded at a 1.8% annual ...
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Historical GDP per capita development. The economic history of Japan is most studied for the spectacular social and economic growth in the 1800s after the Meiji Restoration, as well as a second spate of spectacular economic growth from the 1950s to the 1970s, dubbed the "Japanese economic miracle".
This is an alphabetical list of countries by past and projected Gross Domestic Product per capita, based on the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) methodology, not on official exchange rates. Values are given in International Dollars .
The OECD reported that Japan's real GDP is expected to expand by 0.7 per cent in 2015. This growth rate is lower than US's 2.0 and UK's 2.4. [69] In the third quarter of 2015 the Japanese economy contracted 0.8 percent in annual terms and went into a technical recession as the real GDP shrank for two quarters consecutively. [70]