Gross domestic product (GDP), 1960 to 2023

This data is expressed in US dollars. It is adjusted for inflation but does not account for differences in living costs between countries.

Gross domestic product (GDP) In constant US$ – World Bankconstant 2015 US$
Country/area
1960
2023
Absolute Change
Relative Change
Afghanistan$15,740,683,000
Albania$14,882,174,000
Algeria$27,287,513,000$215,143,970,000+$187,856,457,000+688%
American Samoa$662,725,200
Andorra$3,252,613,000
Angola$85,733,380,000
Antigua and Barbuda$1,688,158,600
Argentina$150,797,810,000$588,959,500,000+$438,161,690,000+291%
Armenia$15,406,164,000
Aruba$3,347,289,900
Australia$204,556,500,000$1,641,762,500,000+$1,437,206,000,000+703%
Austria$83,828,670,000$423,156,300,000+$339,327,630,000+405%
Azerbaijan$57,383,526,000
Bahamas$2,185,539,600$12,404,130,000+$10,218,590,400+468%
Bahrain$39,547,363,000
Bangladesh$22,255,160,000$323,279,980,000+$301,024,820,000+1,353%
Barbados$1,704,405,200$5,571,686,000+$3,867,280,800+227%
Belarus$59,501,097,000
Belgium$107,240,690,000$527,263,730,000+$420,023,040,000+392%
Belize$141,975,420$2,553,897,500+$2,411,922,080+1,699%
Benin$1,651,120,600$17,831,064,000+$16,179,943,400+980%
Bermuda$1,684,353,400$7,143,294,000+$5,458,940,600+324%
Bhutan$2,615,853,600
Bolivia$4,727,740,000$39,500,730,000+$34,772,990,000+736%
Bosnia and Herzegovina$20,725,334,000
Botswana$203,297,650$17,946,870,000+$17,743,572,350+8,728%
Brazil$188,463,860,000$1,954,752,100,000+$1,766,288,240,000+937%
Brunei$13,183,363,000
Bulgaria$63,302,824,000
Burkina Faso$1,166,782,800$17,134,994,000+$15,968,211,200+1,369%
Burundi$798,536,060$3,470,696,200+$2,672,160,140+335%
Cambodia$36,304,273,000
Cameroon$4,827,329,500$41,616,175,000+$36,788,845,500+762%
Canada$276,385,630,000$1,783,097,200,000+$1,506,711,570,000+545%
Cape Verde$2,191,572,500
Cayman Islands$5,946,144,000
Central African Republic$980,371,500$2,052,368,900+$1,071,997,400+109%
Chad$1,696,963,300$10,957,424,000+$9,260,460,700+546%
Chile$26,775,250,000$279,676,780,000+$252,901,530,000+945%
China$158,907,450,000$17,175,671,000,000+$17,016,763,550,000+10,709%
Colombia$30,607,352,000$356,787,360,000+$326,180,008,000+1,066%
Comoros$1,175,676,800
Congo$1,260,529,300$10,369,227,000+$9,108,697,700+723%
Costa Rica$4,791,476,000$73,105,190,000+$68,313,714,000+1,426%
Cote d'Ivoire$5,492,745,700$71,766,610,000+$66,273,864,300+1,207%
Croatia$66,182,676,000
Cuba$81,916,035,000
Curacao$2,679,684,400
Cyprus$29,983,720,000
Czechia$219,949,660,000
Democratic Republic of Congo$19,168,014,000$56,837,575,000+$37,669,561,000+197%
Denmark$80,238,060,000$364,524,270,000+$284,286,210,000+354%
Djibouti$3,549,091,300
Dominica$558,681,700
Dominican Republic$4,530,918,000$100,365,574,000+$95,834,656,000+2,115%
East Timor$1,769,697,000
Ecuador$10,979,942,000$112,162,610,000+$101,182,668,000+922%
Egypt$20,297,834,000$470,885,100,000+$450,587,266,000+2,220%
El Salvador$8,436,981,000$28,274,665,000+$19,837,684,000+235%
Equatorial Guinea$9,456,162,000
Eritrea
Estonia$27,574,843,000
Eswatini$4,585,402,400
Ethiopia$5,263,329,300$112,653,320,000+$107,389,990,700+2,040%
Fiji$864,434,200$5,301,661,700+$4,437,227,500+513%
Finland$49,407,156,000$254,562,200,000+$205,155,044,000+415%
France$508,897,760,000$2,671,234,800,000+$2,162,337,040,000+425%
French Polynesia$2,168,264,000$5,899,734,000+$3,731,470,000+172%
Gabon$1,696,430,500$16,254,737,000+$14,558,306,500+858%
Gambia$1,963,596,000
Georgia$5,243,159,000$22,963,990,000+$17,720,831,000+338%
Germany$917,491,550,000$3,692,367,000,000+$2,774,875,450,000+302%
Ghana$7,657,875,000$70,508,820,000+$62,850,945,000+821%
Greece$41,539,985,000$219,965,720,000+$178,425,735,000+430%
Greenland$2,748,493,600
Grenada$1,138,923,300
Guam$5,719,851,000
Guatemala$7,658,204,000$81,031,690,000+$73,373,486,000+958%
Guinea$14,815,645,000
Guinea-Bissau$1,651,706,100
Guyana$1,555,849,200$19,090,958,000+$17,535,108,800+1,127%
Haiti$6,694,501,400$14,187,369,000+$7,492,867,600+112%
Honduras$2,488,221,400$26,904,207,000+$24,415,985,600+981%
Hong Kong$12,533,114,000$328,370,200,000+$315,837,086,000+2,520%
Hungary$20,724,517,000$156,187,930,000+$135,463,413,000+654%
Iceland$2,370,646,800$23,245,527,000+$20,874,880,200+881%
India$136,368,120,000$3,215,973,400,000+$3,079,605,280,000+2,258%
Indonesia$52,777,607,000$1,178,924,200,000+$1,126,146,593,000+2,134%
Iran$50,350,547,000$513,527,250,000+$463,176,703,000+920%
Iraq$7,007,485,400$188,215,850,000+$181,208,364,600+2,586%
Ireland$24,135,305,000$486,429,700,000+$462,294,395,000+1,915%
Isle of Man$7,558,904,300
Israel$18,511,150,000$418,095,500,000+$399,584,350,000+2,159%
Italy$488,503,150,000$2,010,974,800,000+$1,522,471,650,000+312%
Jamaica$15,132,130,000
Japan$595,545,700,000$4,605,912,000,000+$4,010,366,300,000+673%
Jordan$45,188,465,000
Kazakhstan$232,848,720,000
Kenya$6,102,055,400$100,075,315,000+$93,973,259,600+1,540%
Kiribati$265,519,800
Kosovo$8,586,233,000
Kuwait$117,235,270,000
Kyrgyzstan$8,975,322,000
Laos$20,303,702,000
Latvia$31,360,657,000
Lebanon$33,944,396,000
Lesotho$193,508,320$2,252,257,800+$2,058,749,480+1,064%
Liberia$2,785,350,400$3,588,757,500+$803,407,100+29%
Libya$4,206,979,800$55,767,392,000+$51,560,412,200+1,226%
Liechtenstein
Lithuania$53,657,150,000
Luxembourg$8,747,571,000$70,870,010,000+$62,122,439,000+710%
Macao$40,458,080,000
Madagascar$4,151,435,300$13,977,610,000+$9,826,174,700+237%
Malawi$944,667,400$11,749,795,000+$10,805,127,600+1,144%
Malaysia$10,075,054,000$401,479,170,000+$391,404,116,000+3,885%
Maldives$6,041,332,700
Mali$17,666,972,000
Malta$18,240,979,000
Marshall Islands$212,400,000
Mauritania$1,064,724,200$8,187,943,400+$7,123,219,200+669%
Mauritius$956,645,900$14,274,019,000+$13,317,373,100+1,392%
Mexico$152,252,650,000$1,328,781,000,000+$1,176,528,350,000+773%
Micronesia (country)$336,344,300
Moldova$9,164,832,000
Monaco$8,748,834,000
Mongolia$15,513,849,000
Montenegro$5,177,944,000
Morocco$130,320,710,000
Mozambique$20,523,334,000
Myanmar$2,819,978,800$63,756,970,000+$60,936,991,200+2,161%
Namibia$11,749,736,000
Nauru$100,499,700
Nepal$3,312,007,700$33,735,854,000+$30,423,846,300+919%
Netherlands$165,062,640,000$917,196,700,000+$752,134,060,000+456%
New Caledonia
New Zealand$42,162,426,000$218,152,550,000+$175,990,124,000+417%
Nicaragua$2,980,622,800$15,399,335,000+$12,418,712,200+417%
Niger$2,602,180,400$14,705,444,000+$12,103,263,600+465%
Nigeria$65,552,392,000$550,647,700,000+$485,095,308,000+740%
North Macedonia$11,686,665,000
Northern Mariana Islands$896,763,650
Norway$68,793,510,000$435,564,050,000+$366,770,540,000+533%
Oman$1,249$91,384,590,000+$91,384,588,751+7,315,379,886%
Pakistan$18,921,910,000$400,066,020,000+$381,144,110,000+2,014%
Palau$219,456,530
Palestine$14,789,000,000
Panama$3,163,056,600$75,232,125,000+$72,069,068,400+2,278%
Papua New Guinea$2,618,701,800$25,937,811,000+$23,319,109,200+890%
Paraguay$2,840,643,000$44,019,620,000+$41,178,977,000+1,450%
Peru$27,514,600,000$221,775,230,000+$194,260,630,000+706%
Philippines$31,344,415,000$430,342,470,000+$398,998,055,000+1,273%
Poland$638,035,030,000
Portugal$36,024,000,000$235,813,110,000+$199,789,110,000+555%
Puerto Rico$14,872,867,000$96,564,520,000+$81,691,653,000+549%
Qatar$172,936,990,000
Romania$236,318,490,000
Russia$1,524,520,200,000
Rwanda$1,013,799,940$14,013,299,000+$12,999,499,060+1,282%
Saint Kitts and Nevis$1,005,564,700
Saint Lucia$2,051,031,700
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines$159,183,500$950,988,350+$791,804,850+497%
Samoa$867,318,460
San Marino$1,730,866,800
Sao Tome and Principe$318,740,900
Saudi Arabia$38,385,914,000$776,114,800,000+$737,728,886,000+1,922%
Senegal$3,845,391,000$26,450,942,000+$22,605,551,000+588%
Serbia$54,380,003,000
Seychelles$132,183,656$2,002,037,500+$1,869,853,844+1,415%
Sierra Leone$1,790,724,100$9,327,218,000+$7,536,493,900+421%
Singapore$5,946,720,000$387,147,100,000+$381,200,380,000+6,410%
Sint Maarten (Dutch part)$1,413,549,000
Slovakia$104,403,760,000
Slovenia$54,514,655,000
Solomon Islands$1,556,129,700
Somalia$917,045,760$8,539,706,000+$7,622,660,240+831%
South Africa$65,652,790,000$363,308,100,000+$297,655,310,000+453%
South Korea$25,704,086,000$1,764,487,300,000+$1,738,783,214,000+6,765%
South Sudan
Spain$191,405,160,000$1,381,292,200,000+$1,189,887,040,000+622%
Sri Lanka$6,530,549,000$87,457,720,000+$80,927,171,000+1,239%
Sudan$9,621,210,000$38,395,273,000+$28,774,063,000+299%
Suriname$1,039,858,370$4,524,899,000+$3,485,040,630+335%
Sweden$125,833,175,000$573,717,500,000+$447,884,325,000+356%
Switzerland$212,619,000,000$795,978,200,000+$583,359,200,000+274%
Syria$2,416,812,300$15,999,183,000+$13,582,370,700+562%
Tajikistan$14,619,565,000
Tanzania$8,038,068,700$70,563,660,000+$62,525,591,300+778%
Thailand$15,908,737,000$458,457,300,000+$442,548,563,000+2,782%
Togo$751,799,550$8,344,824,300+$7,593,024,750+1,010%
Tonga$482,629,570
Trinidad and Tobago$3,625,930,500$21,964,810,000+$18,338,879,500+506%
Tunisia$6,137,830,000$48,296,165,000+$42,158,335,000+687%
Turkey$68,945,000,000$1,255,449,300,000+$1,186,504,300,000+1,721%
Turkmenistan$58,035,053,000
Turks and Caicos Islands$939,974,800
Tuvalu$46,855,110
Uganda$46,503,342,000
Ukraine$76,159,410,000
United Arab Emirates$445,641,060,000
United Kingdom$793,127,700,000$3,234,504,400,000+$2,441,376,700,000+308%
United States$3,431,221,400,000$22,062,578,000,000+$18,631,356,600,000+543%
United States Virgin Islands$3,898,534,400
Uruguay$16,784,217,000$61,988,010,000+$45,203,793,000+269%
Uzbekistan$132,828,880,000
Vanuatu$842,026,940
Vietnam$377,364,150,000
Yemen$36,789,137,000
Zambia$3,745,698,600$27,580,697,000+$23,834,998,400+636%
Zimbabwe$4,329,261,000$23,052,607,000+$18,723,346,000+432%
Other
Channel Islands$11,708,681,000
East Asia and Pacific (WB)$1,193,330,600,000$29,927,722,000,000+$28,734,391,400,000+2,408%
Europe and Central Asia (WB)$4,841,958,000,000$23,630,027,000,000+$18,788,069,000,000+388%
European Union (27)$3,072,438,600,000$15,529,080,000,000+$12,456,641,400,000+405%
Faeroe Islands$3,196,194,000
High-income countries$9,337,852,000,000$57,808,825,000,000+$48,470,973,000,000+519%
Latin America and Caribbean (WB)$733,320,500,000$5,974,188,400,000+$5,240,867,900,000+715%
Low-income countries$515,060,200,000
Lower-middle-income countries$443,267,150,000$7,151,756,500,000+$6,708,489,350,000+1,513%
Middle East and North Africa (WB)$222,597,280,000$3,848,726,000,000+$3,626,128,720,000+1,629%
Middle-income countries$1,609,363,900,000$34,700,731,000,000+$33,091,367,100,000+2,056%
North America (WB)$3,709,291,500,000$23,852,818,000,000+$20,143,526,500,000+543%
South Asia (WB)$188,385,660,000$4,085,038,700,000+$3,896,653,040,000+2,068%
Sub-Saharan Africa (WB)$260,033,510,000$1,991,977,200,000+$1,731,943,690,000+666%
Upper-middle-income countries$1,169,647,200,000$27,548,975,000,000+$26,379,327,800,000+2,255%
World$11,070,189,000,000$93,346,685,000,000+$82,276,496,000,000+743%
Data

Gross domestic product (GDP)

In constant US$ – World Bank
See all data and research on:

What you should know about this indicator

  • Gross domestic product (GDP) is a measure of the total value added from the production of goods and services in a country or region each year.
  • This GDP indicator provides information on economic growth and income levels from 1960.
  • This data is adjusted by inflation but does not account for differences in living costs between countries.
  • This data is expressed in constant 2015 US$.
  • For GDP estimates that account for both inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries, see GDP in constant international-$.

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 constant 2015 prices, expressed in U.S. dollars. Dollar figures for GDP are converted from domestic currencies using 2015 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.

Limitations and exceptions: Each industry's contribution to growth in the economy's output is measured by growth in the industry's value added. In principle, value added in constant prices can be estimated by measuring the quantity of goods and services produced in a period, valuing them at an agreed set of base year prices, and subtracting the cost of intermediate inputs, also in constant prices. This double-deflation method requires detailed information on the structure of prices of inputs and outputs.

In many industries, however, value added is extrapolated from the base year using single volume indexes of outputs or, less commonly, inputs. Particularly in the services industries, including most of government, value added in constant prices is often imputed from labor inputs, such as real wages or number of employees. In the absence of well defined measures of output, measuring the growth of services remains difficult.

Moreover, technical progress can lead to improvements in production processes and in the quality of goods and services that, if not properly accounted for, can distort measures of value added and thus of growth. When inputs are used to estimate output, as for nonmarket services, unmeasured technical progress leads to underestimates of the volume of output. Similarly, unmeasured improvements in quality lead to underestimates of the value of output and value added. The result can be underestimates of growth and productivity improvement and overestimates of inflation.

Informal economic activities pose a particular measurement problem, especially in developing countries, where much economic activity is unrecorded. A complete picture of the economy requires estimating household outputs produced for home use, sales in informal markets, barter exchanges, and illicit or deliberately unreported activities. The consistency and completeness of such estimates depend on the skill and methods of the compiling statisticians.

Rebasing of national accounts can alter the measured growth rate of an economy and lead to breaks in series that affect the consistency of data over time. When countries rebase their national accounts, they update the weights assigned to various components to better reflect current patterns of production or uses of output. The new base year should represent normal operation of the economy - it should be a year without major shocks or distortions. Some developing countries have not rebased their national accounts for many years. Using an old base year can be misleading because implicit price and volume weights become progressively less relevant and useful.

To obtain comparable series of constant price data for computing aggregates, the World Bank rescales GDP and value added by industrial origin to a common reference year. Because rescaling changes the implicit weights used in forming regional and income group aggregates, aggregate growth rates are not comparable with those from earlier editions with different base years. Rescaling may result in a discrepancy between the rescaled GDP and the sum of the rescaled components. To avoid distortions in the growth rates, the discrepancy is left unallocated. As a result, the weighted average of the growth rates of the components generally does not equal the GDP growth rate.

Statistical concept and methodology: Gross domestic product (GDP) represents the sum of value added by all its producers. Value added is the value of the gross output of producers less the value of intermediate goods and services consumed in production, before accounting for consumption of fixed capital in production. The United Nations System of National Accounts calls for value added to be valued at either basic prices (excluding net taxes on products) or producer prices (including net taxes on products paid by producers but excluding sales or value added taxes). Both valuations exclude transport charges that are invoiced separately by producers. Total GDP is measured at purchaser prices. Value added by industry is normally measured at basic prices. When value added is measured at producer prices.

Growth rates of GDP and its components are calculated using the least squares method and constant price data in the local currency. Constant price U.S. dollar series are used to calculate regional and income group growth rates. Local currency series are converted to constant U.S. dollars using an exchange rate in the common reference year.

Gross domestic product (GDP)
In constant US$ – World Bank
Total economic output of a country or region per year. This data is adjusted by inflation but does not account for differences in living costs between countries.
Source
World Bank and OECD (2025) – with minor processing by Our World in Data
Last updated
January 24, 2025
Next expected update
January 2026
Date range
1960–2023
Unit
constant 2015 US$

Sources and processing

This data is based on the following sources

The World Development Indicators (WDI) is the primary World Bank collection of development indicators, compiled from officially-recognized international sources. It presents the most current and accurate global development data available, and includes national, regional and global estimates.

Retrieved on
January 24, 2025
Citation
This is the citation of the original data obtained from the source, prior to any processing or adaptation by Our World in Data. To cite data downloaded from this page, please use the suggested citation given in Reuse This Work below.
World Development Indicators (WDI), The World Bank (2025).

How we process data at Our World in Data

All data and visualizations on Our World in Data rely on data sourced from one or several original data providers. Preparing this original data involves several processing steps. Depending on the data, this can include standardizing country names and world region definitions, converting units, calculating derived indicators such as per capita measures, as well as adding or adapting metadata such as the name or the description given to an indicator.

At the link below you can find a detailed description of the structure of our data pipeline, including links to all the code used to prepare data across Our World in Data.

Read about our data pipeline

Reuse this work

  • All data produced by third-party providers and made available by Our World in Data are subject to the license terms from the original providers. Our work would not be possible without the data providers we rely on, so we ask you to always cite them appropriately (see below). This is crucial to allow data providers to continue doing their work, enhancing, maintaining and updating valuable data.
  • All data, visualizations, and code produced by Our World in Data are completely open access under the Creative Commons BY license. You have the permission to use, distribute, and reproduce these in any medium, provided the source and authors are credited.

Citations

How to cite this page

To cite this page overall, including any descriptions, FAQs or explanations of the data authored by Our World in Data, please use the following citation:

“Data Page: Gross domestic product (GDP)”, part of the following publication: Max Roser, Bertha Rohenkohl, Pablo Arriagada, Joe Hasell, Hannah Ritchie and Esteban Ortiz-Ospina (2023) - “Economic Growth”. Data adapted from World Bank and OECD. Retrieved from https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/gdp-worldbank-constant-usd [online resource]
How to cite this data

In-line citationIf you have limited space (e.g. in data visualizations), you can use this abbreviated in-line citation:

World Bank and OECD (2025) – with minor processing by Our World in Data

Full citation

World Bank and OECD (2025) – with minor processing by Our World in Data. “Gross domestic product (GDP) – World Bank – In constant US$” [dataset]. World Bank and OECD, “World Development Indicators” [original data]. Retrieved April 6, 2025 from https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/gdp-worldbank-constant-usd