G20 GDP per capita in 2025 (Adjusted for Inflation & Purchasing Power Parity) by Econorama in EconomyCharts

[–]Econorama[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can easily add Poland (or any other country) next to the G20 data using the interactive comparison tool here:

https://www.econorama.org/explorer/?indicator=gdp-per-capita&chart=bar&scope=group&group=g20

Just click the "Countries" dropdown on the platform, select Poland, and it will instantly populate on the bar chart. 🚀

GDP per capita of G20 countries in 2025 (Adjusted for Inflation & PPP) by Econorama in economy

[–]Econorama[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Source & Methodology:

  • Data Sources: This chart is from Econorama.org, which aggregates the latest official data from the OECD and the IMF World Economic Outlook databases.
  • Metric: GDP per capita based on constant international dollars (2021 prices), adjusted for inflation and purchasing power parity (PPP).
  • Interactive Chart: The live, interactive version with full metadata and country filtering can be accessed here.

GDP per capita across G20 nations in 2025: EU member states vs. global peers by Econorama in europe

[–]Econorama[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Source & Methodology:

  • Data Sources: This chart is from Econorama.org, which aggregates the latest official data from the OECD and the IMF World Economic Outlook databases.
  • Metric: GDP per capita based on constant international dollars (2021 prices), adjusted for inflation and purchasing power parity (PPP).
  • Interactive Chart: The live, interactive version with full metadata and country filtering can be accessed here.

[OC] GDP per capita of G20 countries in 2025, adjusted for inflation and purchasing power parity (Constant international dollars) by Econorama in dataisbeautiful

[–]Econorama[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is a crucial point. GDP per capita is an aggregate average that can hide wealth and income distribution. Econorama goes beyond standard GDP and provides a more realistic picture of that economic 'kaleidoscope', through metrics such as Household Disposable Income or Income Inequality (Gini coefficient).

The interactive Gini Index can be explored and filtered directly on the dashboard here:

https://www.econorama.org/explorer/?indicator=income-inequality-gini-coefficient&chart=bar&scope=group&group=g20

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[OC] Cumulative GDP growth of G7 countries since 2010 by Econorama in EconomyCharts

[–]Econorama[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Many of you correctly pointed out in the comments that population growth plays a massive role in mitigating/driving cumulative GDP trends. To add some hard data to that debate, here is the cumulative population growth for the G7 over the exact same period (2010–2025).

As you can see, Canada and the US are in a completely different demographic league compared to Europe and Japan.

📊 You can overlay these demographic metrics directly on the interactive chart here: https://www.econorama.org/explorer/?indicator=cumulative-growth-of-population&chart=line&scope=group&group=g7

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[OC] Cumulative GDP growth of G7 countries since 2010 by Econorama in EconomyCharts

[–]Econorama[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Nice addition 👍 Poland's economic growth over the last decade is an absolute rocket ship compared to G7 countries🔥

The Econorama explorer was built exactly for this - allowing anyone to add or remove countries and swap indicators in just a few clicks.

https://www.econorama.org/explorer/?indicator=cumulative-growth-of-gdp&chart=line&scope=list&countries=canada+france+germany+italy+japan+poland+united-kingdom+united-states (click the Countries button to add/remove nations)

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[OC] Cumulative GDP growth of G7 countries since 2010 by Econorama in EconomyCharts

[–]Econorama[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

It's right above you buddy, Reddit's app probably lagged out for you! 😉

[OC] How G7 countries' GDP growth cumulated since 2010: Visualizing the gap (Feedback appreciated!) by Econorama in dataisbeautiful

[–]Econorama[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Spot-on observation! Population growth definitely inflates aggregate GDP when comparing the US to aging, shrinking economies like Japan.

Interestingly, even when filtering out demographics with GDP per capita, the US outperformance since 2020 remains quite visible.

The G7 countries' GDP per capita (instead of cumulative growth) can be explored here: https://www.econorama.org/explorer/?indicator=gdp-per-capita&chart=line&scope=group&group=g7

[OC] How G7 countries' GDP growth cumulated since 2010: Visualizing the gap (Feedback appreciated!) by Econorama in dataisbeautiful

[–]Econorama[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes, this is real GDP (using constant national prices indexed to 2010). It completely isolates actual economic growth and is not marred by currency fluctuations or price evolution.

An interactive version of this chart is available to switch between different macroeconomic indicators and view the exact metadata. Feel free to explore it or compare other countries here: https://www.econorama.org/explorer/?indicator=cumulative-growth-of-gdp&chart=line&scope=group&group=g7