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Visualizing the $105 Trillion World Economy in One Chart

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A chart showing the breakup of the world economy, organized by the size of each country's gross domestic product.

 

By the end of 2023, the world economy is expected to have a gross domestic product (GDP) of $105 trillion, or $5 trillion higher than the year before, according to the latest International Monetary Fund (IMF) projections from its 2023 World Economic Outlook report.

In nominal terms, that’s a 5.3% increase in global GDP. In inflation-adjusted terms, that would be a 2.8% increase.

ℹ️ Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures the total value of economic output—goods and services—produced within a given time frame by both the private and public sectors. All numbers used in this article, unless otherwise specified, are nominal figures, and do not account for inflation.

The year started with turmoil for the global economy, with financial markets rocked by the collapse of several mid-sized U.S. banks alongside persistent inflation and tightening monetary conditions in most countries. Nevertheless, some economies have proven to be resilient, and are expected to register growth from 2022.

Ranking Countries by Economic Size in 2023

The U.S. is expected to continue being the biggest economy in 2023 with a projected GDP of $26.9 trillion for the year. This is more than the sum of the GDPs of 174 countries ranked from Indonesia (17th) to Tuvalu (191st).

China stays steady at second place with a projected $19.4 trillion GDP in 2023. Most of the top-five economies remain in the same positions from 2022, with one notable exception.

India is expected to climb past the UK to become the fifth-largest economy with a projected 2023 GDP of $3.7 trillion.

Here’s a look at the size of every country’s economy in 2023, according to IMF’s estimates.

Rank Country GDP (USD) % of Total
1 ???????? U.S. $26,855B 25.54%
2 ???????? China $19,374B 18.43%
3 ???????? Japan $4,410B 4.19%
4 ???????? Germany $4,309B 4.10%
5 ???????? India $3,737B 3.55%
6 ???????? UK $3,159B 3.00%
7 ???????? France $2,923B 2.78%
8 ???????? Italy $2,170B 2.06%
9 ???????? Canada $2,090B 1.99%
10 ???????? Brazil $2,081B 1.98%
11 ???????? Russia $2,063B 1.96%
12 ???????? South Korea $1,722B 1.64%
13 ???????? Australia $1,708B 1.62%
14 ???????? Mexico $1,663B 1.58%
15 ???????? Spain $1,492B 1.42%
16 ???????? Indonesia $1,392B 1.32%
17 ???????? Netherlands $1,081B 1.03%
18 ???????? Saudi Arabia $1,062B 1.01%
19 ???????? Türkiye $1,029B 0.98%
20 ???????? Switzerland $870B 0.83%
21 ???????? Taiwan $791B 0.75%
22 ???????? Poland $749B 0.71%
23 ???????? Argentina $641B 0.61%
24 ???????? Belgium $624B 0.59%
25 ???????? Sweden $599B 0.57%
26 ???????? Ireland $594B 0.57%
27 ???????? Thailand $574B 0.55%
28 ???????? Norway $554B 0.53%
29 ???????? Israel $539B 0.51%
30 ???????? Singapore $516B 0.49%
31 ???????? Austria $515B 0.49%
32 ???????? Nigeria $507B 0.48%
33 ???????? UAE $499B 0.47%
34 ???????? Vietnam $449B 0.43%
35 ???????? Malaysia $447B 0.43%
36 ???????? Philippines $441B 0.42%
37 ???????? Bangladesh $421B 0.40%
38 ???????? Denmark $406B 0.39%
39 ???????? South Africa $399B 0.38%
40 ???????? Egypt $387B 0.37%
41 ???????? Hong Kong $383B 0.36%
42 ???????? Iran $368B 0.35%
43 ???????? Chile $359B 0.34%
44 ???????? Romania $349B 0.33%
45 ???????? Colombia $335B 0.32%
46 ???????? Czech Republic $330B 0.31%
47 ???????? Finland $302B 0.29%
48 ???????? Peru $268B 0.26%
49 ???????? Iraq $268B 0.25%
50 ???????? Portugal $268B 0.25%
51 ???????? New Zealand $252B 0.24%
52 ???????? Kazakhstan $246B 0.23%
53 ???????? Greece $239B 0.23%
54 ???????? Qatar $220B 0.21%
55 ???????? Algeria $206B 0.20%
56 ???????? Hungary $189B 0.18%
57 ???????? Kuwait $165B 0.16%
58 ???????? Ethiopia $156B 0.15%
59 ???????? Ukraine $149B 0.14%
60 ???????? Morocco $139B 0.13%
61 ???????? Slovak
Republic
$128B 0.12%
62 ???????? Ecuador $121B 0.12%
63 ???????? Dominican
Republic
$121B 0.12%
64 ???????? Puerto Rico $121B 0.11%
65 ???????? Kenya $118B 0.11%
66 ???????? Angola $118B 0.11%
67 ???????? Oman $105B 0.10%
68 ???????? Guatemala $102B 0.10%
69 ???????? Bulgaria $101B 0.10%
70 ???????? Venezuela $97B 0.09%
71 ???????? Uzbekistan $92B 0.09%
72 ???????? Luxembourg $87B 0.08%
73 ???????? Tanzania $85B 0.08%
74 ???????? Turkmenistan $83B 0.08%
75 ???????? Croatia $79B 0.08%
76 ???????? Lithuania $78B 0.07%
77 ???????? Costa Rica $78B 0.07%
78 ???????? Uruguay $77B 0.07%
79 ???????? Panama $77B 0.07%
80 ???????? Côte d’Ivoire $77B 0.07%
81 ???????? Serbia $74B 0.07%
82 ???????? Belarus $74B 0.07%
83 ???????? Azerbaijan $70B 0.07%
84 ???????? DRC $69B 0.07%
85 ???????? Slovenia $68B 0.06%
86 ???????? Ghana $67B 0.06%
87 ???????? Myanmar $64B 0.06%
88 ???????? Jordan $52B 0.05%
89 ???????? Tunisia $50B 0.05%
90 ???????? Uganda $50B 0.05%
91 ???????? Cameroon $49B 0.05%
92 ???????? Latvia $47B 0.05%
93 ???????? Sudan $47B 0.04%
94 ???????? Libya $46B 0.04%
95 ???????? Bolivia $46B 0.04%
96 ???????? Bahrain $45B 0.04%
97 ???????? Paraguay $43B 0.04%
98 ???????? Nepal $42B 0.04%
99 ???????? Estonia $42B 0.04%
100 ???????? Macao $36B 0.03%
101 ???????? Honduras $34B 0.03%
102 ???????? El Salvador $34B 0.03%
103 ???????? Papua
New Guinea
$33B 0.03%
104 ???????? Senegal $31B 0.03%
105 ???????? Cyprus $31B 0.03%
106 ???????? Cambodia $31B 0.03%
107 ???????? Zimbabwe $30B 0.03%
108 ???????? Zambia $29B 0.03%
109 ???????? Iceland $29B 0.03%
110 ???????? Bosnia &
Herzegovina
$28B 0.03%
111 ???????? Trinidad
& Tobago
$28B 0.03%
112 ???????? Georgia $28B 0.03%
113 ???????? Haiti $27B 0.03%
114 ???????? Armenia $24B 0.02%
115 ???????? Guinea $23B 0.02%
116 ???????? Burkina Faso $21B 0.02%
117 ???????? Mali $21B 0.02%
118 ???????? Gabon $20B 0.02%
119 ???????? Albania $20B 0.02%
120 ???????? Mozambique $20B 0.02%
121 ???????? Botswana $20B 0.02%
122 ???????? Yemen $20B 0.02%
123 ???????? Malta $19B 0.02%
124 ???????? Benin $19B 0.02%
125 ???????? West Bank
& Gaza
$19B 0.02%
126 ???????? Nicaragua $17B 0.02%
127 ???????? Jamaica $17B 0.02%
128 ???????? Mongolia $17B 0.02%
129 ???????? Niger $17B 0.02%
130 ???????? Guyana $16B 0.02%
131 ???????? Madagascar $16B 0.02%
132 ???????? Moldova $16B 0.02%
133 ???????? Brunei Darussalam $16B 0.01%
134 ???????? North Macedonia $15B 0.01%
135 ???????? Equatorial Guinea $15B 0.01%
136 ???????? Mauritius $15B 0.01%
137 ???????? Bahamas $14B 0.01%
138 ???????? Laos $14B 0.01%
139 ???????? Namibia $13B 0.01%
140 ???????? Rwanda $13B 0.01%
141 ???????? Congo $13B 0.01%
142 ???????? Tajikistan $13B 0.01%
143 ???????? Kyrgyz Republic $12B 0.01%
144 ???????? Chad $12B 0.01%
145 ???????? Malawi $11B 0.01%
146 ???????? Mauritania $11B 0.01%
147 ???????? Kosovo $10B 0.01%
148 ???????? Togo $9B 0.01%
149 ???????? Somalia $9B 0.01%
150 ???????? Montenegro $7B 0.01%
151 ???????? South Sudan $7B 0.01%
152 ???????? Maldives $7B 0.01%
153 ???????? Barbados $6B 0.01%
154 ???????? Fiji $5B 0.01%
155 ???????? Eswatini $5B 0.00%
156 ???????? Liberia $4B 0.00%
157 ???????? Djibouti $4B 0.00%
158 ???????? Andorra $4B 0.00%
159 ???????? Aruba $4B 0.00%
160 ???????? Sierra Leone $4B 0.00%
161 ???????? Suriname $3B 0.00%
162 ???????? Burundi $3B 0.00%
163 ???????? Belize $3B 0.00%
164 ???????? Central
African Republic
$3B 0.00%
165 ???????? Bhutan $3B 0.00%
166 ???????? Eritrea $3B 0.00%
167 ???????? Lesotho $3B 0.00%
168 ???????? Cabo Verde $2B 0.00%
169 ???????? Gambia $2B 0.00%
170 ???????? Saint Lucia $2B 0.00%
171 ???????? East Timor $2B 0.00%
172 ???????? Seychelles $2B 0.00%
173 ???????? Guinea-Bissau $2B 0.00%
174 ???????? Antigua & Barbuda $2B 0.00%
175 ???????? San Marino $2B 0.00%
176 ???????? Solomon Islands $2B 0.00%
177 ???????? Comoros $1B 0.00%
178 ???????? Grenada $1B 0.00%
179 ???????? Vanuatu $1B 0.00%
180 ???????? Saint Kitts
& Nevis
$1B 0.00%
181 ???????? Saint Vincent
& the Grenadines
$1B 0.00%
182 ???????? Samoa $1B 0.00%
183 ???????? Dominica $1B 0.00%
184 ???????? São Tomé
& Príncipe
$1B 0.00%
185 ???????? Tonga $1B 0.00%
186 ???????? Micronesia $0.5B 0.00%
187 ???????? Marshall Islands $0.3B 0.00%
188 ???????? Palau $0.3B 0.00%
189 ???????? Kiribati $0.2B 0.00%
190 ???????? Nauru $0.2B 0.00%
191 ???????? Tuvalu $0.1B 0.00%


Note: Projections for Afghanistan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Syria are missing from IMF’s database for 2023.

Here are the largest economies for each region of the world.

  • Africa: Nigeria ($506.6 billion)
  • Asia: China ($19.4 trillion)
  • Europe: Germany ($4.3 trillion)
  • Middle East: Saudi Arabia ($1.1 trillion)
  • North & Central America: U.S. ($26.9 trillion)
  • Oceania: Australia ($1.7 trillion)
  • South America: Brazil ($2.1 trillion)

Ranked: 2023’s Shrinking Economies

In fact, 29 economies are projected to shrink from their 2022 sizes, leading to nearly $500 billion in lost output.

A bar chart showing the amount of nominal GDP shrinkage for several countries.

Russia will see the biggest decline, with a projected $150 billion contraction this year. This is equal to about one-third of total decline of all 29 countries with shrinking economies.

Egypt (-$88 billion) and Canada (-$50 billion) combined make up another one-third of lost output.

In Egypt’s case, the drop can be partly explained by the country’s currency (Egyptian pound), which has dropped in value against the U.S. dollar by about 50% since mid-2022.

Russia and Canada are some of the world’s largest oil producers and the oil price has fallen since 2022. A further complication for Russia is that the country has been forced to sell oil at a steep discount because of Western sanctions.

Here are the projected changes in GDP for all countries facing year-over-year declines:

Country Region 2022–23 Change (USD) 2022–23 Change (%)
???????? Russia Europe -$152.65B -6.9%
???????? Egypt Africa -$88.12B -18.5%
???????? Canada North America -$50.17B -2.3%
???????? Saudi Arabia Middle East -$46.25B -4.2%
???????? Bangladesh Asia -$39.69B -8.6%
???????? Norway Europe -$25.16B -4.3%
???????? Kuwait Middle East -$19.85B -10.8%
???????? Oman Middle East -$9.77B -8.5%
???????? Colombia South America -$9.25B -2.7%
???????? UAE Middle East -$8.56B -1.7%
???????? South Africa Africa -$6.69B -1.6%
???????? Ghana Africa -$6.22B -8.5%
???????? Qatar Middle East -$5.91B -2.6%
???????? Angola Africa -$3.54B -2.9%
???????? Zimbabwe Africa -$3.09B -9.4%
???????? Ukraine Europe -$2.79B -1.8%
???????? Sudan Africa -$2.72B -5.5%
???????? Iraq Middle East -$2.47B -0.9%
???????? East Timor Asia -$1.67B -45.7%
???????? Gabon Africa -$1.60B -7.3%
???????? Equatorial Guinea Africa -$1.35B -8.2%
???????? Malawi Africa -$1.24B -9.9%
???????? Laos Asia -$1.21B -7.9%
???????? Brunei Asia -$1.13B -6.8%
???????? Yemen Middle East -$1.12B -5.4%
???????? South Sudan Africa -$0.86B -10.9%
???????? Burundi Africa -$0.66B -16.9%
???????? Sierra Leone Africa -$0.42B -10.6%
???????? Suriname South America -$0.05B -1.4%

The presence of Saudi Arabia, Norway, Kuwait, and Oman in the top 10 biggest GDP contractions further highlights the potential impact on GDP for oil-producing countries, according to the IMF’s projections.

More recently, producers have been cutting supply in an effort to boost prices, but concerns of slowing global oil demand in the wake of a subdued Chinese economy (the world’s second-largest oil consumer), have kept oil prices lower than in 2022 regardless.

The Footnote on GDP Forecasts

While organizations like the IMF have gotten fairly good at GDP forecasting, it’s still worth remembering that these are projections and assumptions made at the beginning of the year that may not hold true by the end of 2023.

For example, JP Morgan has already changed their forecast for China’s 2023 real GDP growth six times in as many months after expectations of broad-based pandemic-recovery spending did not materialize in the country.

The key takeaway from IMF’s projections for 2023 GDP growth rests on how well countries restrict inflation without stifling growth, all amidst tense liquidity conditions.

Where Does This Data Come From?

Source: The International Monetary Fund’s Datamapper which uses projections made in the April 2023 World Economic Outlook report.

Note: Projections for Afghanistan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Syria are missing from the IMF’s database. Furthermore, all figures used in the article, unless specified, are nominal GDP numbers and rates.

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S&P/TSX composite gains almost 100 points, U.S. stock markets also higher

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TORONTO – Strength in the base metal and technology sectors helped Canada’s main stock index gain almost 100 points on Friday, while U.S. stock markets also climbed higher.

The S&P/TSX composite index closed up 93.51 points at 23,568.65.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 297.01 points at 41,393.78. The S&P 500 index was up 30.26 points at 5,626.02, while the Nasdaq composite was up 114.30 points at 17,683.98.

The Canadian dollar traded for 73.61 cents US compared with 73.58 cents US on Thursday.

The October crude oil contract was down 32 cents at US$68.65 per barrel and the October natural gas contract was down five cents at US$2.31 per mmBTU.

The December gold contract was up US$30.10 at US$2,610.70 an ounce and the December copper contract was up four cents US$4.24 a pound.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 13, 2024.

Companies in this story: (TSX:GSPTSE, TSX:CADUSD)

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Statistics Canada reports wholesale sales higher in July

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OTTAWA – Statistics Canada says wholesale sales, excluding petroleum, petroleum products, and other hydrocarbons and excluding oilseed and grain, rose 0.4 per cent to $82.7 billion in July.

The increase came as sales in the miscellaneous subsector gained three per cent to reach $10.5 billion in July, helped by strength in the agriculture supplies industry group, which rose 9.2 per cent.

The food, beverage and tobacco subsector added 1.7 per cent to total $15 billion in July.

The personal and household goods subsector fell 2.5 per cent to $12.1 billion.

In volume terms, overall wholesale sales rose 0.5 per cent in July.

Statistics Canada started including oilseed and grain as well as the petroleum and petroleum products subsector as part of wholesale trade last year, but is excluding the data from monthly analysis until there is enough historical data.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 13, 2024.

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S&P/TSX composite up more than 150 points, U.S. stock markets mixed

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TORONTO – Canada’s main stock index was up more than 150 points in late-morning trading, helped by strength in the base metal and energy sectors, while U.S. stock markets were mixed.

The S&P/TSX composite index was up 172.18 points at 23,383.35.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 34.99 points at 40,826.72. The S&P 500 index was up 10.56 points at 5,564.69, while the Nasdaq composite was up 74.84 points at 17,470.37.

The Canadian dollar traded for 73.55 cents US compared with 73.59 cents US on Wednesday.

The October crude oil contract was up $2.00 at US$69.31 per barrel and the October natural gas contract was up five cents at US$2.32 per mmBTU.

The December gold contract was up US$40.00 at US$2,582.40 an ounce and the December copper contract was up six cents at US$4.20 a pound.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 12, 2024.

Companies in this story: (TSX:GSPTSE, TSX:CADUSD)

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