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Economy of Netherlands vs South Africa compared: GDP & Debt

Updated on by Georank

The Netherlands has a GDP of $1.33T compared to $427B for South Africa, ranking 18/197 and 40/197 by economy size, respectively.

The Netherlands has $578B in government debt (43.3% of GDP), compared to $336B (78.6% of GDP) in South Africa.

Netherlands vs South Africa GDP by year

Netherlands
South Africa
1x
Year GDP, current $
Netherlands South Africa
2025 $1,332,767,651,100 $427,184,325,997
2024 $1,213,936,238,063 $401,144,998,374
2023 $1,135,475,867,551 $381,440,724,491
2022 $1,046,540,797,549 $407,596,043,068
2021 $1,054,472,123,450 $419,986,284,375
2020 $932,560,861,701 $337,974,655,408
2019 $928,903,005,576 $389,330,032,224
2018 $929,733,599,797 $405,260,723,893
2017 $848,233,537,846 $381,448,814,653
2016 $797,163,949,290 $323,585,509,674
2015 $775,743,675,303 $346,709,790,459
2014 $901,556,501,756 $381,198,869,776
2013 $883,951,539,007 $400,886,013,596
2012 $845,689,017,066 $434,400,545,086
2011 $913,140,741,333 $458,199,494,831
2010 $852,464,982,433 $417,363,822,802
2009 $878,954,223,140 $329,754,060,647
2008 $957,901,566,041 $316,131,258,616
2007 $853,499,460,873 $333,077,117,254
2006 $737,593,995,289 $303,858,675,364
2005 $688,133,699,636 $288,867,217,197
2004 $661,224,886,143 $255,806,908,595
2003 $582,435,617,082 $197,018,965,309
2002 $475,529,972,123 $129,087,556,612
2001 $432,536,219,669 $135,429,905,923
2000 $417,649,282,154 $151,752,757,215
1999 $447,778,514,140 $151,516,957,079
1998 $438,612,530,549 $152,982,984,557
1997 $417,506,211,882 $168,978,057,328
1996 $451,372,549,020 $163,234,925,381
1995 $452,967,334,614 $171,735,933,897
1994 $379,688,232,232 $153,512,712,382
1993 $354,070,495,966 $147,194,747,566
1992 $363,497,050,125 $146,956,150,987
1991 $327,982,316,124 $135,203,698,238
1990 $318,799,003,994 $126,048,140,142
1989 $258,716,904,292 $108,055,624,082
1988 $262,295,966,105 $103,976,831,871
1987 $245,406,949,521 $96,535,763,418
1986 $201,157,708,221 $73,354,771,399
1985 $144,057,523,222 $64,459,376,087
1984 $144,124,462,912 $84,870,163,366
1983 $153,671,294,109 $96,204,110,942
1982 $158,712,765,536 $85,904,057,409
1981 $164,375,775,854 $93,141,472,164
1980 $195,439,301,707 $89,411,864,402
1979 $179,933,827,310 $63,038,658,089
1978 $156,089,077,205 $51,607,412,902
1977 $127,203,923,857 $45,328,411,332
1976 $109,329,386,564 $41,150,460,288
1975 $100,397,061,694 $42,906,905,672
1974 $87,371,810,804 $41,389,186,095
1973 $71,946,639,603 $33,262,772,008
1972 $54,787,070,173 $24,515,919,217
1971 $44,644,730,576 $23,411,076,638
1970 $38,220,884,519 $21,218,391,513
1969 $34,086,038,090 $19,256,992,297
1968 $30,097,635,751 $17,124,793,150
1967 $27,143,828,099 $15,821,393,671
1966 $24,741,480,717 $14,211,394,315
1965 $22,721,869,808 $13,068,994,772
1964 $20,232,048,553 $11,955,995,218
1963 $17,193,744,109 $10,854,195,658
1962 $15,847,582,341 $9,813,996,074
1961 $14,599,836,396 $9,225,996,310
1960 $13,282,979,015 $8,748,596,501

Data sources: World Bank | Economy & Growth (1960–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08).

GeoRank.org/economy/netherlands/south-africa | CC BY

GDP per capita in Netherlands vs South Africa by year

Netherlands
GDP per capita

GDP per capita, PPP
South Africa
GDP per capita

GDP per capita, PPP
1x
Year Current $
Netherlands South Africa
GDP per capita GDP per capita, PPP GDP per capita GDP per capita, PPP
2025 $73,684 - $6,598 -
2024 $67,465 $86,174 $6,267 $15,456
2023 $63,516 $81,729 $6,034 $15,200
2022 $59,123 $78,630 $6,534 $14,749
2021 $60,142 $68,574 $6,829 $13,682
2020 $53,468 $62,597 $5,581 $12,671
2019 $53,555 $62,345 $6,534 $13,361
2018 $53,955 $58,819 $6,914 $13,347
2017 $49,514 $56,038 $6,618 $13,738
2016 $46,809 $53,162 $5,651 $13,519
2015 $45,794 $50,957 $6,112 $13,398
2014 $53,457 $49,751 $6,857 $13,359
2013 $52,602 $49,622 $7,332 $13,369
2012 $50,474 $47,653 $8,077 $12,987
2011 $54,702 $47,004 $8,646 $13,143
2010 $51,306 $45,301 $7,973 $12,637
2009 $53,172 $44,959 $6,375 $12,261
2008 $58,247 $46,714 $6,185 $12,525
2007 $52,101 $44,203 $6,592 $12,047
2006 $45,124 $41,208 $6,077 $11,250
2005 $42,165 $37,778 $5,837 $10,441
2004 $40,611 $35,961 $5,221 $9,714
2003 $35,897 $34,286 $4,062 $9,139
2002 $29,447 $34,568 $2,688 $8,792
2001 $26,956 $33,259 $2,847 $8,428
2000 $26,225 $31,895 $3,218 $8,095
1999 $28,319 $29,316 $3,242 $7,667
1998 $27,924 $27,749 $3,310 $7,463
1997 $26,745 $26,062 $3,700 $7,433
1996 $29,064 $24,564 $3,618 $7,208
1995 $29,301 $23,480 $3,856 $6,875
1994 $24,683 $22,414 $3,489 $6,611
1993 $23,156 $21,443 $3,400 $6,375
1992 $23,939 $20,831 $3,462 $6,275
1991 $21,764 $20,177 $3,243 $6,383
1990 $21,322 $19,203 $3,093 $6,382
1989 $17,423 - $2,727 -
1988 $17,771 - $2,702 -
1987 $16,734 - $2,586 -
1986 $13,804 - $2,027 -
1985 $9,941 - $1,839 -
1984 $9,992 - $2,504 -
1983 $10,696 - $2,938 -
1982 $11,089 - $2,717 -
1981 $11,537 - $3,050 -
1980 $13,812 - $3,029 -
1979 $12,817 - $2,202 -
1978 $11,196 - $1,852 -
1977 $9,180 - $1,671 -
1976 $7,937 - $1,559 -
1975 $7,346 - $1,670 -
1974 $6,450 - $1,656 -
1973 $5,353 - $1,369 -
1972 $4,110 - $1,038 -
1971 $3,384 - $1,020 -
1970 $2,931 - $952 -
1969 $2,647 - $891 -
1968 $2,364 - $817 -
1967 $2,155 - $779 -
1966 $1,986 - $722 -
1965 $1,848 - $685 -
1964 $1,668 - $646 -
1963 $1,437 - $605 -
1962 $1,342 - $563 -
1961 $1,254 - $546 -
1960 $1,156 - $532 -

Data sources: World Bank | Economy & Growth (1960–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08).

GeoRank.org/economy/netherlands/south-africa | CC BY

The Netherlands' GDP per capita is $73,684, ranking 12/197, compared to $6,598 in South Africa, ranking 109/197. Adjusted for purchasing power (GDP per capita PPP), the Netherlands ranks 11th at $86,174, while South Africa ranks 112th at $15,456.

Economic indicators

Netherlands South Africa
Gross domestic product
$1.33T
2025
$427B
2025
GDP rank
18/197
2025
40/197
2025
GDP growth
1.78%
2024-2025
1.11%
2024-2025
GDP per capita
$73,684
2025
$6,598
2025
GDP per capita rank
12/197
2025
109/197
2025
GDP per capita, PPP
$86,174
2024
$15,456
2024
GDP per capita PPP rank
11/197
2024
112/197
2024
Government debt
$578B
2025
$336B
2025
Debt-to-GDP ratio
43.3%
2025
78.6%
2025
Government debt per person
$31,942
2025
$5,189
2025
Government debt per person rank
23/185
2025
84/185
2025
Average annual personal income after taxes
$46,674
2026
$4,738
2026
Market capitalization of domestic companies
$1.1T
2017
$1.4T
2025
Number of millionaires
1,294,000
2026
97,000
2026
Number of billionaires
13
2026
7
2026
Income share by richest 10%
21.4%
2021
42.1%
2022
Income share by poorest 10%
3.6%
2021
1.4%
2022
Government expenditure, % of GDP
45.1%
2025
34.2%
2025
Consumer prices inflation
3.26%
2024-2025
3.21%
2024-2025
Central bank interest rate n/a
7%
2026
Unemployment rate
3.9%
2025
32.3%
2024
Population
18243998
65829368

Spending and national debt comparison by year

Netherlands
Spending

Debt
South Africa
Spending

Debt
1x
Year % of GDP
Netherlands South Africa
Government spending Government debt Government spending Government debt
2025 45.1% 43.3% 34.2% 78.6%
2024 44.4% 43.7% 33% 76%
2023 44% 45.8% 32.5% 73.2%
2022 43.3% 48.4% 31.9% 70.7%
2021 45.9% 50.5% 32.7% 68.8%
2020 47.8% 53.4% 34.6% 68.9%
2019 42.1% 47.7% 31.4% 56.1%
2018 42.4% 51.6% 30.2% 51.5%
2017 42.8% 56% 29.9% 48.6%
2016 43.9% 60.9% 29.9% 47.1%
2015 45.3% 63.8% 30.2% 45.2%
2014 46.7% 67.2% 29.3% 43.3%
2013 47.5% 67.2% 28.9% 40.4%
2012 47.6% 65.7% 28.6% 37.4%
2011 47.8% 61.2% 28.1% 34.7%
2010 48.9% 58.9% 28.3% 31.2%
2009 48.4% 56.3% 28.5% 27%
2008 44.3% 54.4% 26% 24%
2007 43.3% 42.7% 24.4% 24.3%
2006 44% 45% 24.7% 28%
2005 43.4% 49.6% 25.1% 29.6%
2004 44.7% 50.1% 22.7% 30.7%
2003 45.8% 49.8% 22.6% 31.5%
2002 44.8% 48.7% 22.2% 31.8%
2001 44.1% 49.4% 22.6% 38%
2000 43.2% 52.2% 22.6% 37.9%
1999 44.3% 58.6% 26.7% 45.9%
1998 44.6% 62.7% 27.1% 45.8%
1997 45.7% 65.7% 27.9% 45.8%
1996 47.3% 71.2% 28.5% 44.3%
1995 53.9% 73% 27.2% 47%
1994 49.4% 73.5% 31.3% 46.4%
1993 50.9% 76.7% 29.1% 39.8%
1992 50.2% 75.6% 29.8% 34.8%
1991 49.6% 74.8% 27.8% 34.7%
1990 48.8% 75% 28.7% 31.8%
1989 54.5% 73.7% 29.6% 33.3%
1988 56.4% 73.7% 23.9% 30.6%
1987 58.5% 71.3% 28% 33.5%
1986 57% 68.9% 27.8% 32.5%
1985 57.3% 67.1% 26.8% 26.3%
1984 58.1% 61.9% 25.2% 23.2%
1983 59.1% 58.4% 25.1% 28.7%
1982 59.1% 52.4% 23.8% 31.3%
1981 56.8% 46.9% 23.3% 27.4%
1980 55.2% 43.6% 21.8% 33.3%
1979 53.7% 39.5% 26.5% 41.9%
1978 52.3% 38.1% 26.8% 44.7%
1977 50.6% 34.9% 27.3% 45.3%
1976 50.8% 35.2% 23% 35%
1975 50.8% 36.1% 21.2% 32.8%
1974 46.4% 36.3% 19.1% 33.7%
1973 44.6% 38.1% 21% 38.2%
1972 44.9% 41.3% 22.9% 41.1%
1971 44.6% 43.7% 19.9% 41.1%
1970 43.2% 46.1% 20% 43.3%
1969 42.1% 48.2% 18.8% 44.4%
1968 25.4% 54.4% 19.4% 42.7%
1967 24.1% 55% 18.8% 41.1%
1966 24.4% 55.6% 18.3% 41.4%
1965 23.4% 55.8% 18.2% 42.7%
1964 22.3% 57.1% 11.3% 30%
1963 21.9% 61.7% 15.9% 43.4%
1962 22.1% 63.8% 15.9% 45.7%
1961 22.2% 65.9% 15.7% 52.8%
1960 20.4% 66.7% 16.7% 52.9%

Data sources: International Monetary Fund (IMF) | Public Finances in Modern History (1960–1999, retrieved 2026-07-08); International Monetary Fund (IMF) | Fiscal Monitor (1990–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08).

GeoRank.org/economy/netherlands/south-africa | CC BY

In 2025, the Netherlands' government spending was $602B, accounting for 45.1% of its GDP, while South Africa spent $146B, or 34.2% of GDP.

Debt-to-GDP ratio is 43.3% in the Netherlands and 78.6% in South Africa, ranking 121/185 and 46/185, respectively.

Government deficit by year

Deficit/surplus
Netherlands

South Africa
1x
Year Deficit/surplus, % of GDP
Netherlands South Africa
2025 -1.84% -5.78%
2024 -0.94% -5.67%
2023 -0.37% -5.6%
2022 0.002% -4.25%
2021 -2.26% -5.54%
2020 -3.72% -9.62%
2019 1.91% -5.07%
2018 1.49% -3.73%
2017 1.35% -4.02%
2016 0.23% -3.72%
2015 -1.84% -4.37%
2014 -2.17% -3.93%
2013 -2.87% -3.9%
2012 -3.83% -4.04%
2011 -4.42% -3.7%
2010 -5.3% -4.51%
2009 -5.06% -4.67%
2008 -0.06% -0.49%
2007 -0.16% 1.22%
2006 0.04% 0.81%
2005 -0.51% -0.1%
2004 -1.82% -1.04%
2003 -3.19% -1.59%
2002 -2.23% -0.96%
2001 -0.47% -1.02%
2000 1.14% -1.38%
1999 0.28% -2.21%
1998 -1.34% -2.56%
1997 -1.6% -4.08%
1996 -1.91% -4.53%
1995 -8.72% -4.38%
1994 -3.53% -8.09%
1993 -3.13% -8.54%
1992 -3.12% -7.09%
1991 -2.05% -4.85%
1990 -4.08% -3.82%
1989 -5% -8.3%
1988 -4.23% -3.29%
1987 -5.39% -6.36%
1986 -4.62% -5.69%
1985 -3.6% -4.86%
1984 -5.25% -5.24%
1983 -5.47% -5.3%
1982 -6.17% -3.88%
1981 -4.92% -3.72%
1980 -3.95% -1.91%
1979 -2.46% -4.65%
1978 -2.09% -5.42%
1977 -0.75% -5.52%
1976 -2.02% -4.19%
1975 -2.82% -2.62%
1974 -0.26% -1.5%
1973 0.54% -4.54%
1972 -0.7% -5.39%
1971 -1.58% -1.96%
1970 -1.52% -3.19%
1969 -1.14% -3.94%
1968 -3.06% -3.38%
1967 -1.97% -3.8%
1966 -2.37% -3.04%
1965 -1.15% -3.15%
1964 -1.2% -1.19%
1963 -0.54% -2.26%
1962 -1.38% -1.4%
1961 -0.38% -3.25%
1960 0.9% -2.36%
1959 -0.74% -4.4%
1958 -0.89% -3.5%
1957 0.3% -2.8%
1956 -0.83% -2.12%
1955 -0.25% -2.9%
1954 0.76% -2.53%
1953 -2.95% -3.72%
1952 2.19% -4.14%
1951 2.13% -0.4%
1950 0.81% -2.33%
1949 2.3% -6.87%
1948 - -6.03%
1947 - -1.82%
1946 - -4.03%
1945 - -7.41%
1944 - -8.94%
1943 - -8.49%
1942 - -9.08%
1941 - -7.3%
1940 - -10.9%
1939 -3.19% -2.96%
1938 -0.37% -3.91%
1937 0.02% -2.16%
1936 -0.41% -2.58%
1935 -0.69% -3.2%
1934 -0.92% -3.29%
1933 -2.55% -3.31%
1932 -1.97% -4.72%
1931 -1.66% -5.31%
1930 -0.55% -5.19%
1929 -1.16% -4.41%
1928 -0.62% -3.29%
1927 -0.33% -3.79%
1926 -0.78% -4.76%
1925 -2.04% -4.92%
1924 -3.37% -4.72%
1923 -2.62% -5.53%
1922 - -4.51%
1921 - -5.38%
1920 - -5.52%
1919 - -2.6%
1918 - -3.7%
1917 - -3.52%
1916 - -2.57%
1915 - -10.7%
1914 - -11.6%
1913 -0.45% -4.15%
1912 -0.47% -
1911 -0.13% -
1910 -0.93% -
1909 -0.34% -
1908 -0.57% -
1907 0.03% -
1906 0.16% -
1905 0.1% -
1904 -0.72% -
1903 0.09% -
1902 -0.14% -
1901 0.03% -
1900 0.06% -
1899 -0.13% -
1898 -0.48% -
1897 -0.45% -
1896 0.08% -
1895 -0.06% -
1894 0.12% -
1893 -0.76% -
1892 -1.72% -
1891 -0.06% -
1890 -0.06% -
1889 0.04% -
1888 -0.31% -
1887 -0.37% -
1886 -0.08% -
1885 -0.55% -
1884 0% -
1883 -2.1% -
1882 -1.11% -
1881 -1.06% -
1880 0.21% -

Data sources: International Monetary Fund (IMF) | Public Finances in Modern History (1880–1999, retrieved 2026-07-08); International Monetary Fund (IMF) | Fiscal Monitor (1990–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08).

GeoRank.org/economy/netherlands/south-africa | CC BY

In 2025, the Netherlands' government deficit, the difference between spending and revenue, was $24.5B, equivalent to 1.84% of GDP. This compares to South Africa's deficit of $24.7B, or 5.78% of GDP.

Over the past 66 years, the Netherlands recorded a fiscal deficit in 56 of those years, while South Africa ran a deficit in 64 years. On average, the Netherlands posted an annual deficit equal to 2.13% of GDP, compared to deficit of 3.82% of GDP for South Africa.

Inflation comparison by year

Inflation
Netherlands

South Africa
1x
Year Consumer prices inflation
Netherlands South Africa
2025 3.26% 3.21%
2024 3.35% 4.36%
2023 3.84% 6.08%
2022 10% 7.04%
2021 2.68% 4.62%
2020 1.27% 3.23%
2019 2.63% 4.1%
2018 1.7% 4.51%
2017 1.38% 5.19%
2016 0.32% 6.6%
2015 0.6% 4.52%
2014 0.98% 6.13%
2013 2.51% 5.78%
2012 2.46% 5.74%
2011 2.34% 5%
2010 1.28% 4.07%
2009 1.19% 7.24%
2008 2.49% 9.91%
2007 1.61% 6.18%
2006 1.1% 3.24%
2005 1.69% 2.06%
2004 1.26% -0.69%
2003 2.09% 5.68%
2002 3.29% 9.49%
2001 4.16% 5.7%
2000 2.36% 5.34%
1999 2.16% 5.18%
1998 1.96% 6.88%
1997 2.11% 8.6%

Data sources: World Bank | Economy & Growth (1997–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08).

GeoRank.org/economy/netherlands/south-africa | CC BY

Over the past 29 years, the Netherlands has recorded an average annual inflation rate of 2.35%, compared with 5.34% in South Africa. In 2025, inflation was 3.26% in the Netherlands and 3.21% in South Africa.

Top exports between countries

Netherlands
Export category Export value
Machinery & equipment $1.2B
IT & IP services $738M
Chemicals & pharma $534M
Raw materials & minerals $353M
Processed food, beverages & tobacco $167M
Business & finance services $144M
Transport & tourism services $140M
Metals $74M
Textiles & consumer goods $65.1M
Raw agricultural goods $63.1M
South Africa
Export category Export value
Raw agricultural goods $1.57B
Raw materials & minerals $1.35B
Metals $694M
Processed food, beverages & tobacco $269M
Machinery & equipment $136M
Precious metals & jewellery $112M
Chemicals & pharma $112M
Wood & paper products $17M
Animal & marine products $15.2M
Textiles & consumer goods $14.7M

Balance of trade

Netherlands South Africa
Current account balance
$111B
2024
-$1.81B
2025
Current account balance ranking
6/190
2024
135/190
2025
Current account balance, % of GDP
+9.14%
2024
-0.42%
2025
Goods imports
$606B
2024
$104B
2025
Goods exports
$693B
2024
$116B
2025
Service imports
$262B
2024
$21.8B
2025
Service exports
$308B
2024
$18.1B
2025
Imports of goods and services, % of GDP
69.5%
2025
29.5%
2025
Exports of goods and services, % of GDP
80.7%
2025
31.4%
2025

Economic freedom indices

The indices of economic freedom below are issued by the Heritage Foundation. Higher scores indicate stronger economic health.

Netherlands South Africa
Economic freedom 78.5 58.6
Economic freedom ranking 11/197 110/197
Property rights 96 48.8
Government integrity 86.8 46.7
Judicial effectiveness 96.1 64.6
Tax burden 54 65.4
Government spending 42.2 68.4
Fiscal health 95.9 45.3
Business freedom 85 67.9
Labor freedom 59.3 70.8
Monetary freedom 77 75.8
Trade freedom 79.4 68.8
Investment freedom 90 40
Financial freedom 80 40

Economic freedom comparison by year

Netherlands
South Africa
1x
Year Economic freedom index
Netherlands South Africa
2026 78.5 58.6
2025 78.2 57.3
2024 77.3 55.3
2023 78 55.7
2022 79.5 56.2
2021 76.8 59.7
2020 77 58.8
2019 76.8 58.3
2018 76.2 63
2017 75.8 62.3
2016 74.6 61.9
2015 73.7 62.6
2014 74.2 62.5
2013 73.5 61.8
2012 73.3 62.7
2011 74.7 62.7
2010 75 62.8
2009 77 63.8
2008 77.4 63.4
2007 75.5 63.5
2006 75.4 63.7
2005 72.9 62.9
2004 74.5 66.3
2003 74.6 67.1
2002 75.1 64
2001 73 63.8
2000 70.4 63.7
1999 70.2 63.3
1998 69.2 64.3
1997 70.4 63.2
1996 69.7 62.5
1995 - 60.7

Data sources: The Heritage Foundation | Economic Freedom Index (1995–2026, retrieved 2026-07-08).

GeoRank.org/economy/netherlands/south-africa | CC BY

The Economic Freedom Index for the Netherlands is 78.5, ranking 11/197, compared to 58.6 for South Africa, ranking 110/197. The chart above displays a comparison of annual changes in economic freedom indexes.

Other economic metrics

Netherlands South Africa
Services, % of GDP
70.4%
2025
63.1%
2025
Industry, % of GDP
17.7%
2025
24.1%
2025
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing, % of GDP
1.68%
2025
2.83%
2025
GNI, Atlas method
$1.24T
2025
$406B
2025
GNI per capita, PPP
$85,480
2025
$15,600
2025
Total reserves including gold
$118B
2025
$76B
2025
Total reserves ranking
27/177
2025
35/177
2025
Net foreign direct investment
$11.1B
2024
-$1.85B
2025
Net inflows of foreign direct investment
-$17.1B
2024
$2.33B
2024
Net outflows of foreign direct investment
-$5.93B
2024
-$1.26B
2024
Servicing debt to the IMF, % of GNI n/a
5.74%
2024
Poverty at national poverty lines
14.5%
2021
37.9%
2022
Gross capital formation, % of GDP
19.8%
2025
13.9%
2025

GDP per capita map

1x

Data sources: World Bank | Economy & Growth (1985–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08); U.S. Census Bureau (1985–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08).

GeoRank.org/economy/netherlands/south-africa | CC BY

Compare countries by 7 more topics

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Data sources:

  1. World Bank | Economy & Growth (1960–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08)
  2. International Monetary Fund (IMF) | Public Finances in Modern History (1880–1999, retrieved 2026-07-08)
  3. International Monetary Fund (IMF) | Fiscal Monitor (1990–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08)
  4. The Heritage Foundation | Economic Freedom Index (1995–2026, retrieved 2026-07-08)
  5. U.S. Census Bureau (1985–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08)
  6. TradeMap (2024–2025, retrieved 2026-07-08)
  7. United Nations | World Population Prospects (2026, retrieved 2026-07-08)
  8. LivingCost (2026, retrieved 2026-07-08)

Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) — you’re free to copy, share, remix, adapt, and use even commercially as long as you give appropriate credit and clearly indicate if you made changes. Other sources may be subject to different license terms.

The current account balance is the sum of net trade in goods and services, net earnings from cross-border investments, and net transfer payments. It reflects a country's economic transactions with the rest of the world and is a fundamental component of the balance of payments. A surplus indicates that a country exports more than it imports, while a deficit shows the opposite.

Gross National Income (GNI) measures a country's total income. It encompasses income earned by residents, businesses, and foreign sources, defined as employee compensation and investment profits. GNI adds product taxes not included elsewhere and subtracts subsidies. It accounts for income from residents working abroad but excludes earnings from foreigners within the country.

A negative value for Net Foreign Direct Investment indicates a country is a net receiver of investments, as foreign inflows exceed outflows after Balance of Payments adjustments. A positive value indicates a net provider, with outflows exceeding inflows. Inflows are credits (increasing foreign claims on domestic assets), while outflows are debits (increasing domestic assets abroad).

Foreign direct investment (FDI, net inflows) shows how much capital foreign investors bring into a country after accounting for any funds that flow back in the opposite direction. It represents the net value of overseas companies establishing, expanding, or financing businesses in the reporting country. A positive number means more capital entered the country than was withdrawn, while a negative number means foreign investors pulled out more than they invested.

Foreign direct investment (FDI, net outflows) shows how much capital residents of a country invest abroad after accounting for any funds that flow back in the opposite direction. It represents the net value of domestic companies establishing, expanding, or financing businesses in other countries. A positive number means more capital was invested abroad than withdrawn, while a negative number means residents pulled back more than they invested.

Principal and interest payments to the IMF in currency, goods, or services on long-term debt expressed as a share of GNI.

Formerly gross domestic investment, gross capital formation measures the share of a country’s economic output invested in fixed assets, including buildings, machinery, and infrastructure. It indicates how much of the economy is devoted to building productive capacity.