Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Historical development of GDP per capita [26]. Before the 1880s, Argentina was a relatively isolated backwater, dependent on the salted meat, wool, leather, and hide industries for both the more significant part of its foreign exchange and the generation of domestic income and profits.
District Population [1] GDP (bil. US$) 2023 [1] a GDP per capita (US$) 2023 [1] a Agri culture b Mining b! Manufac turing b Services & cons truction b Exports (mil. US$) 2011 [2] Mean mo. salary 2017
Latin American and the Caribbean countries by GDP per capita PPP (2019). This is a list of Latin American and the Caribbean countries by gross domestic product at purchasing power parity in international dollars according to the International Monetary Fund's estimates in the October 2023 World Economic Outlook database.
This is a list of countries by nominal GDP per capita. GDP per capita is often considered an indicator of a country's standard of living; [1] [2] however, this is inaccurate because GDP per capita is not a measure of personal income. Measures of personal income include average wage, real income, median income, disposable income and GNI per capita.
A country's gross domestic product (GDP) at purchasing power parity (PPP) per capita is the PPP value of all final goods and services produced within an economy in a given year, divided by the average (or mid-year) population for the same year. This is similar to nominal GDP per capita but adjusted for the cost of living in each country.
Map of South American countries by GDP (nominal) per capita according to the International Monetary Fund for 2018 [2] ... Argentina: 13,709: 65 5
Rank Country/Territory GDP (PPP) per capita (Int$) Year 1 Guyana 80,137: 2024 2 Chile 31,005: 2024 3 Uruguay 30,170: 2024 4 Argentina 26,390: 2024 5 Brazil 20,809: 2024 6 Colombia
By 1950, Argentina's GDP per capita accounted fell to less than half of that of the United States. [115] Perón's second Five-Year Plan in 1952 favored increased agricultural output over industrialization, but industrial growth and high wages in previous years had expanded the domestic demand for agrarian goods. [101]