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Rank Country GDP (millions of USD) 1 China 17,700,899 2 Japan 4,230,862 3 India 3,732,224 4 South Korea 1,709,232 5 Australia 1,687,713 6 Indonesia 1,417,387 7 Taiwan ...
[7] [8] Since China's transition to a socialist market economy through controlled privatisation and deregulation, [9] [10] the country has seen its ranking increase from ninth in 1978, to second in 2010; China's economic growth accelerated during this period and its share of global nominal GDP surged from 2% in 1980 to 18% in 2021.
The first set of data on the left columns of the table includes estimates for the year 2023 made for each economy of the 196 economies (189 U.N. member states and 7 areas of Aruba, Hong Kong, Kosovo, Macau, Palestine, Puerto Rico, and Taiwan) covered by the International Monetary Fund (IMF)'s International Financial Statistics (IFS) database ...
rank Country/Territory 2024 GDP (nominal) in billions — Asia: 42.72 trillion: 1 China: 18.53 trillion [2] 2 Japan: 4.07 trillion [3] 3 India: 3.88 trillion [4] 4 Russia: 2.0 trillion 5 South Korea: 1.76 trillion 6 Indonesia: 1.47 trillion 7 Turkey: 1.3 trillion 8 Saudi Arabia: 1.11 trillion 9 Taiwan: 803.0 billion 10 Thailand: 548.9 billion ...
The world's third-biggest economy is now expected to expand about 2.0% in price-adjusted real terms in the fiscal year ending in March 2023, according to the Cabinet Office's projections ...
This is a list of gross domestic product (GDP) at purchasing power parity (PPP) for the latest year. [1] All sovereign states with United Nations membership and territory in Asia or Oceania are included on the list apart from the transcontinental countries which are included in the lists for Europe (when they are current or suspended members of the Council of Europe) or Africa in the case of ...
A country's gross domestic product (GDP) at purchasing power parity (PPP) per capita is the PPP value of all final goods and services produced within an economy in a given year, divided by the average (or mid-year) population for the same year. This is similar to nominal GDP per capita but adjusted for the cost of living in each country.
From 1995 to 2023, the country’s GDP fell from $5.5 trillion to $4.2 trillion in nominal terms. [47] At the turn of the 21st century, the Bank of Japan set out to encourage growth through a policy of quantitative easing , with the central bank purchasing government bonds at an unprecedented scale to address the persisting deflationary pressure .