Gross Domestic Product

The Gross Domestic Product is the monetary value of final goods and services produced by an economy in a given period of time.

The word gross means that certain values are not calculated; these values are: variation in inventories and capital depreciations or appreciations.

The word domestic indicates production within the geographical boundaries of a given economy and

The word product refers to an added value.

How is the Gross Domestic Product calculated?

Three equivalent theoretical methods are used to calculate GDP: (1) Expenditure Method, (2) Income Method, and (3) Added Value Method.

Expenditure Method

The GDP is the sum of all expenditures made for the acquisition of end product goods or services produced within a given economy; this means that the acquisition of intermediate goods and services is excluded, as are imported goods or services.

Added Value Method

The GDP is the sum of the added values in the different production stages in every sector of the economy. The added value created by a business in the production process is equal to the value of its production minus the value of the intermediate goods.

Income Method

The GDP is the sum of the earnings of salaried employees, profits made by businesses, and taxes minus any grants. The difference between the value of a company’s outputs and the intermediate goods ends up in one of the three following categories: workers; in the form of labor income, businesses; in the form of benefits, or the State; in the form of indirect taxes, such as the VAT (Value Added Tax).

Nominal GDP versus real GDP

It must be kept in mind that production is measured in monetary terms; because of this, inflation can cause the nominal measurement of the GDP to be bigger from one year to the next, while at the same time the real GDP is unchanged. To solve this problem, the real GDP is calculated by deflating the nominal GDP through a price index, or, to be more exact, a GDP deflator is applied. A GDP deflator is a price index that includes every produced good.

To make international comparisons, the GDP can be expressed in US dollars. Since exchange rates tend to be very unstable, this measurement is affected by the exchange rate fluctuations. To solve this problem, economists use another method to conduct international comparisons, which consists of deflating the GDP by using the purchasing power parity (better known as PPP).

Domestic Product versus National Product

In the case of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the added value within a country is calculated. In the case of the Gross National Product (GNP), the value added by the nationally owned production factors is calculated.

Gross Product versus Net Product

The difference between the gross product and national product is the depreciation of the capital. Gross Product does not consider the depreciation of the capital, while the Net Product does, in fact, use it for calculating the total.

Product Per Capita

The GDP per capita is the average amount of Gross Product per person. It is calculated by dividing the total GDP by the number of people living in a given economy.

What is wrong with the GDP?

The use of the GDP per capita as a measurement of well being is generalized, but the Gross Domestic product might not be the best way to measure well-being. Here is why:

  • The GDP does not take capital depreciation into account (this includes machinery, factories, etc. as well as natural resources; and “human capital” could also be included). For instance, a country can increase its GDP by intensively exploiting its natural resources, but the countries´ capital will diminish, leaving decreased capital for future generations.
  • It does not consider negative externalities generated by some production activities, for instance: environmental pollution.
  • The distribution of income is not taken into account. The inhabitants of a country with the same per capita GDP as another country but with a more equitable distribution of its income will enjoy an increased level of well being.
  • The GDP does not take into consideration productive activities that affect well being but do not generate transactions, for instance, volunteer work or stay-home parents.
  • Some activities that negatively affect well being can actually increase the GDP, for instance, divorces, crimes and war.
  • The GDP ignores external debt. The GDP of a country will increase if the government or the businesses within its boundaries take on loans from foreign entities. Obviously, this would cause a diminished GDP in future periods.

Gross Domestic Product: Data by Cuntry

Current 2020 US$ Million

country GDP
1 United States 21322950
2 China 14687744
3 Japan 5055587
4 Germany 3887727
5 United Kingdom 2697806
6 India 2674851
7 France 2647418
8 Italy 1897461
9 Canada 1655684
10 Korea, Rep. 1644312
11 Russian Federation 1493075
12 Brazil 1476107
13 Australia 1330381
14 Spain 1278128
15 Mexico 1120832
16 Indonesia 1059054
17 Netherlands 909793
18 Switzerland 741999
19 Saudi Arabia 734271
20 Poland 599442
21 Sweden 547054
22 Belgium 526021
23 Thailand 500461
24 Austria 435049
25 Nigeria 432198
26 Ireland 428608
27 Israel 413267
28 Argentina 385740
29 Egypt, Arab Rep. 383817
30 Bangladesh 373979
31 Norway 367633
32 Philippines 361751
33 Denmark 354762
34 Singapore 349488
35 United Arab Emirates 349473
36 Hong Kong SAR, China 344943
37 South Africa 338291
38 Malaysia 337456
39 Pakistan 300425
40 Finland 271886
41 Colombia 270348
42 Chile 254042
43 Romania 251362
44 Iran, Islamic Rep. 239735
45 Portugal 229031
46 New Zealand 212697
47 Peru 201409
48 Greece 188480
49 Iraq 180898
50 Kazakhstan 171082
51 Algeria 164873
52 Hungary 157288
53 Ukraine 156617
54 Qatar 144411
55 Morocco 121353
56 Ethiopia 107657
57 Kuwait 107512
58 Cuba 107351
59 Slovak Republic 106737
60 Puerto Rico 103130
61 Kenya 100657
62 Ecuador 95865
63 Sri Lanka 84304
64 Myanmar 79006
65 Dominican Republic 78844
66 Guatemala 77715
67 Oman 75909
68 Luxembourg 73699
69 Bulgaria 70368
70 Ghana 70043
71 Tanzania 66068
72 Libya 65688
73 Cote d'Ivoire 63027
74 Costa Rica 62395
75 Belarus 61371
76 Uzbekistan 60224
77 Croatia 58221
78 Panama 57086
79 Lithuania 56964
80 Slovenia 53734
81 Uruguay 53668
82 Serbia 53356
83 Congo, Dem. Rep. 48716
84 Angola 48501
85 Turkmenistan 45818
86 Jordan 43700
87 Azerbaijan 42693
88 Tunisia 42491
89 Cameroon 40773
90 Uganda 37600
91 Bolivia 36629
92 Paraguay 35432
93 Bahrain 34621
94 Latvia 34390
95 Nepal 33433
96 Lebanon 31712
97 Estonia 31330
98 Sudan 27034
99 Cambodia 25872
100 Macao SAR, China 25343
101 Cyprus 25227
102 El Salvador 24921
103 Senegal 24530
104 Papua New Guinea 23848
105 Honduras 23352
106 Iceland 21629
107 Zimbabwe 21509
108 Trinidad and Tobago 20807
109 Bosnia and Herzegovina 20226
110 Afghanistan 19955
111 Lao PDR 18981
112 Zambia 18137
113 Burkina Faso 17725
114 Mali 17465
115 Georgia 16010
116 Benin 15686
117 West Bank and Gaza 15531
118 Gabon 15314
119 Malta 15249
120 Albania 15162
121 Botswana 14960
122 Haiti 14508
123 Mozambique 14235
124 Guinea 14177
125 Jamaica 13812
126 Niger 13744
127 Mongolia 13312
128 Madagascar 13051
129 Nicaragua 12681
130 Armenia 12641
131 North Macedonia 12361
132 Malawi 12041
133 Brunei Darussalam 12005
134 Moldova 11530
135 Congo, Rep. 11468
136 Mauritius 11408
137 Syrian Arab Republic 11155
138 Chad 10715
139 Namibia 10583
140 Rwanda 10174
141 Bahamas, The 9958
142 Equatorial Guinea 9893
143 New Caledonia 9454
144 Channel Islands 9301
145 Somalia 9204
146 Kyrgyz Republic 8270
147 Mauritania 8260
148 Tajikistan 8133
149 Kosovo 7717
150 Togo 7400
151 Bermuda 6887
152 Monaco 6739
153 Isle of Man 6684
154 Liechtenstein 6405
155 Guam 5916
156 French Polynesia 5792
157 Cayman Islands 5655
158 Guyana 5471
159 Barbados 4779
160 Montenegro 4769
161 Fiji 4432
162 Virgin Islands (U.S.) 4189
163 Sierra Leone 4062
164 Eswatini 3982
165 Maldives 3712
166 Faroe Islands 3262
167 Djibouti 3185
168 Liberia 3176
169 Greenland 3082
170 Suriname 2911
171 Andorra 2891
172 Burundi 2649
173 Aruba 2558
174 Curacao 2534
175 Bhutan 2457
176 Central African Republic 2326
177 Timor-Leste 2162
178 Lesotho 2053
179 Belize 2047
180 Cabo Verde 1821
181 Gambia, The 1812
182 San Marino 1541
183 Solomon Islands 1536
184 Guinea-Bissau 1520
185 St. Lucia 1497
186 Antigua and Barbuda 1410
187 Seychelles 1382
188 Sint Maarten (Dutch part) 1236
189 Comoros 1225
190 Grenada 1043
191 Vanuatu 909
192 St. Kitts and Nevis 883
193 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 869
194 Samoa 868
195 Northern Mariana Islands 858
196 Turks and Caicos Islands 774
197 American Samoa 721
198 Dominica 504
199 Tonga 484
200 Sao Tome and Principe 471
201 Micronesia, Fed. Sts. 372
202 Palau 261
203 Marshall Islands 240
204 Kiribati 222
205 Nauru 124
206 Tuvalu 51

Source: World Bank national accounts data, and OECD National Accounts data files.
https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP.CD

GDP at purchaser's prices is the sum of gross value added by all resident producers in the economy plus any product taxes and minus any subsidies not included in the value of the products. It is calculated without making deductions for depreciation of fabricated assets or for depletion and degradation of natural resources. Data are in current U.S. dollars. Dollar figures for GDP are converted from domestic currencies using single year official exchange rates. For a few countries where the official exchange rate does not reflect the rate effectively applied to actual foreign exchange transactions, an alternative conversion factor is used.

Top 10 Countries by Gross Domestic Product

Gross Domestic Product

Source: World Bank 2020