Gross domestic product is the total income earned through the production of goods and services in an economic territory during an accounting period. It can be measured in three different ways: using either the expenditure approach, the income approach, or the production approach. This indicator is expressed in current prices, meaning no adjustment has been made to account for price changes over time. This indicator is expressed in United States dollars.
World Bank code: NY.GDP.MKTP.CD
• Data available for 214 countries • Latest year: 2024
The world median across 192 reporting countries was
47.80B.
What this measures:
GDP (Gross Domestic Product) is the total monetary value of all goods and services produced within a country in a given year, measured in current US dollars. It is the most widely used measure of a country's economic size. Large populations and high productivity both contribute to high GDP. Note that GDP does not measure wealth distribution or individual living standards — for those, see GDP per capita.
How "Economy" indicators are measured
Economic indicators measure the size, structure, and dynamics of a country's economy. The World Bank collects data from national statistical offices, central banks, and the IMF, then normalizes it for cross-country comparison. Watch out for nominal versus real (inflation-adjusted) values: nominal figures in current US dollars are sensitive to exchange rate swings, while constant dollar series isolate real growth. Most macro indicators have a 1–2 year reporting lag.
Distribution — 2024
Reporting
192 countries
Median
47.80B
Mean
572.20B
25th percentile
11.97B
75th percentile
289.22B
Range
162.59M – 28.75T
World at a Glance — 2024
Every reporting country, grouped by region, shaded by value (quintile).
Lighter = lower value · Darker = higher value. Hover a cell to see the country and value.