What Is GDP Per Capita?
GDP per capita measures a country’s economic output divided by its population. It indicates how much economic production (goods and services) can be attributed, on average, to each person and is commonly used as a proxy for national prosperity.
Key Takeaways
- GDP per capita = Gross Domestic Product ÷ Population.
- It helps compare economic well‑being across countries by accounting for population differences.
- High GDP per capita often appears in small, highly developed, or resource‑rich countries; low values are typical in poorer, fast‑growing populations.
- Changes in GDP per capita result from shifts in either GDP or population (or both).
How It Works
GDP per capita converts aggregate economic output into a per‑person figure. Economists and policymakers use it alongside total GDP to assess productivity, living standards, and economic progress. Because both GDP and population enter the calculation, increases in GDP per capita can come from:
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- Higher GDP with stable population (e.g., productivity gains, technological improvements).
- Falling population with unchanged GDP (rare and potentially problematic).
Conversely, GDP per capita can fall if population growth outpaces GDP growth, even when GDP rises in absolute terms.
GDP vs. GDP Per Capita
- GDP: total market value of all final goods and services produced in a country — a measure of overall economic size and productivity.
- GDP per capita: average economic output per person — a measure intended to reflect average prosperity or standard of living.
Both metrics are complementary: GDP shows scale and influence, while GDP per capita better captures average material well‑being.
Implications and Drivers
- Productivity and technology: Advances can raise GDP per capita without population change.
- Population dynamics: Rapid population growth can erode per‑person averages if GDP does not keep pace.
- Economic structure: Financial centers, energy exporters, and high‑value exporters often post high GDP per capita, especially in small countries.
- Policy and institutions: Fiscal and monetary policy, market reforms, and investment climates affect GDP growth and thus per‑person outcomes.
Negative GDP per capita growth can occur even when total GDP increases, if population growth outstrips GDP growth—this can worsen average living standards in vulnerable countries.
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Examples
- Countries with very high GDP per capita tend to be small, wealthy, and highly developed. Leading examples include Luxembourg, Switzerland, and Ireland.
- Countries with the lowest GDP per capita include Burundi, South Sudan, and Malawi.
- The United States’ real GDP per capita is on the order of tens of thousands of dollars (a representative figure often cited is around $69,000 in recent estimates).
- India is the world’s most populous country, with roughly 1.46 billion people, a factor that affects its GDP per capita despite large overall GDP.
Global Growth Outlook
International organizations track global GDP growth because it influences prospects for GDP per capita worldwide. Forecasts have projected global GDP growth around the low‑to‑mid single digits, with advanced economies generally expanding more slowly than developing economies.
How to Calculate
GDP per capita = Gross Domestic Product ÷ Population
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This simple formula yields an average that is useful for cross‑country comparison, but it does not capture income distribution, nonmarket activity, or differences in living costs across countries.
Common Questions
Q: How does GDP per capita differ from per capita income?
A: GDP per capita measures average economic output per person. Per capita income measures average income received per person. GDP per capita gauges overall economic prosperity; per capita income better reflects individual earnings and living standards.
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Q: Can a country have rising GDP but falling GDP per capita?
A: Yes—if population grows faster than GDP, GDP per capita declines even while total GDP increases.
Conclusion
GDP per capita is a widely used, straightforward metric for comparing average economic output and, by extension, a rough indicator of prosperity across countries. It is most informative when considered alongside total GDP, population trends, living‑cost adjustments, and measures of income distribution.