~~ II DRAWN. u..,,.. H POPULATION, PER CAPITA PRODUCT AND GROWTH RATES JLC G 1046.Gl W World bank atlas 19...

Similar documents
World Refugee Survey, 2001

The National Police Immigration Service (NPIS) forcibly returned 412 persons in December 2017, and 166 of these were convicted offenders.

GLOBAL RISKS OF CONCERN TO BUSINESS WEF EXECUTIVE OPINION SURVEY RESULTS SEPTEMBER 2017

A Partial Solution. To the Fundamental Problem of Causal Inference

Regional Scores. African countries Press Freedom Ratings 2001

Contracting Parties to the Ramsar Convention

SCALE OF ASSESSMENT OF MEMBERS' CONTRIBUTIONS FOR 1994

Proposed Indicative Scale of Contributions for 2016 and 2017

AUSTRALIA S REFUGEE RESPONSE NOT THE MOST GENEROUS BUT IN TOP 25

Country pairings for the second cycle of the Mechanism for the Review of Implementation of the United Nations Convention against Corruption

LIST OF CHINESE EMBASSIES OVERSEAS Extracted from Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People s Republic of China *

Mechanism for the Review of Implementation of the United Nations Convention against Corruption: country pairings for the second review cycle

1994 No DESIGNS

1994 No PATENTS

Mechanism for the Review of Implementation of the United Nations Convention against Corruption: country pairings for the second review cycle

Delays in the registration process may mean that the real figure is higher.

The Multidimensional Financial Inclusion MIFI 1

Return of convicted offenders

Geoterm and Symbol Definition Sentence. consumption. developed country. developing country. gross domestic product (GDP) per capita

Collective Intelligence Daudi Were, Project

Country pairings for the second review cycle of the Mechanism for the Review of Implementation of the United Nations Convention against Corruption

Middle School Level. Middle School Section I

2018 Social Progress Index

TAKING HAPPINESS SERIOUSLY

LIST OF CONTRACTING STATES AND OTHER SIGNATORIES OF THE CONVENTION (as of January 11, 2018)

The NPIS is responsible for forcibly returning those who are not entitled to stay in Norway.

Country pairings for the first review cycle of the Mechanism for the Review of Implementation of the United Nations Convention against Corruption

Good Sources of International News on the Internet are: ABC News-

Country pairings for the first cycle of the Mechanism for the Review of Implementation of the United Nations Convention against Corruption

ORGANISATION DES NATIONS UNIES

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL REPORT 1997

Human Resources in R&D

FREEDOM OF THE PRESS 2008

Diplomatic Conference to Conclude a Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works by Visually Impaired Persons and Persons with Print Disabilities

Share of Countries over 1/3 Urbanized, by GDP per Capita (2012 $) 1960 and 2010

Global Prevalence of Adult Overweight & Obesity by Region

GLOBAL PRESS FREEDOM RANKINGS

GUIDELINE OF COMMITTEES IN TASHKENT MODEL UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE 2019

Table of country-specific HIV/AIDS estimates and data, end 2001

Translation from Norwegian

HUMAN RESOURCES IN R&D

2017 Social Progress Index

The National Police Immigration Service (NPIS) returned 444 persons in August 2018, and 154 of these were convicted offenders.

Figure 2: Range of scores, Global Gender Gap Index and subindexes, 2016

My Voice Matters! Plain-language Guide on Inclusive Civic Engagement

PROTOCOL RELATING TO AN AMENDMENT TO THE CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL CIVIL AVIATION ARTICLE 45, SIGNED AT MONTREAL ON 14 JUNE parties.

SEVERANCE PAY POLICIES AROUND THE WORLD

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

Hilde C. Bjørnland. BI Norwegian Business School. Advisory Panel on Macroeconomic Models and Methods Oslo, 27 November 2018

REGIONAL INTEGRATION IN THE AMERICAS: THE IMPACT OF THE GLOBAL ECONOMIC CRISIS

Country pairings for the first review cycle of the Mechanism for the Review of Implementation of the United Nations Convention against Corruption

CENTRAL AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN

CAC/COSP/IRG/2018/CRP.9

STATUS OF THE CONVENTION ON THE PROHIBITION OF THE DEVELOPMENT, PRODUCTION, STOCKPILING AND USE OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS AND ON THEIR DESTRUCTION

World Heritage UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION

Income and Population Growth

Status of National Reports received for the United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development (Habitat III)

2017 BWC Implementation Support Unit staff costs

INCOME AND EXIT TO ARGENTINA

REPORT OF THE FOURTH SPECIAL SESSION OF THE CONFERENCE OF THE STATES PARTIES

Sex ratio at birth (converted to female-over-male ratio) Ratio: female healthy life expectancy over male value

Copyright Act - Subsidiary Legislation CHAPTER 311 COPYRIGHT ACT. SUBSIDIARY LEGlSLA non. List o/subsidiary Legislation

Proforma Cost for national UN Volunteers for UN Partner Agencies

UNHCR, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

VACATION AND OTHER LEAVE POLICIES AROUND THE WORLD

TD/B/Inf.222. United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. Membership of UNCTAD and membership of the Trade and Development Board

MIGRATION IN SPAIN. "Facebook or face to face? A multicultural exploration of the positive and negative impacts of

CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX 2013.

CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX 2013.

Countries for which a visa is required to enter Colombia

CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX 2012.

Rainforest Alliance Authorized Countries for Single Farm and Group Administrator Audit and Certification Activities. July, 2017 Version 1

SLOW PACE OF RESETTLEMENT LEAVES WORLD S REFUGEES WITHOUT ANSWERS

the Federal Reserve Board.

Voluntary Scale of Contributions

Rule of Law Index 2019 Insights

Millennium Profiles Demographic & Social Energy Environment Industry National Accounts Trade. Social indicators. Introduction Statistics

ASYLUM STATISTICS MONTHLY REPORT

Statistical Appendix 2 for Chapter 2 of World Happiness Report March 1, 2018

2018 Global Law and Order

Per Capita Income Guidelines for Operational Purposes

Proforma Cost for National UN Volunteers for UN Partner Agencies for National UN. months) Afghanistan 14,030 12,443 4,836

The World s Most Generous Countries

92 El Salvador El Salvador El Salvador El Salvador El Salvador Nicaragua Nicaragua Nicaragua 1

Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index 2014

1 THICK WHITE SENTRA; SIDES AND FACE PAINTED TO MATCH WALL PAINT: GRAPHICS DIRECT PRINTED TO SURFACE; CLEAT MOUNT TO WALL CRITICAL INSTALL POINT

Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index 2013

PQLI Dataset Codebook

NAP Global Network. Where We Work. April 2018

Charting Cambodia s Economy, 1H 2017

Bahrain, Ecuador, Indonesia, Japan, Peru, Philippines, Republic of Korea, Serbia and Thailand.

Overview of the status of UNCITRAL Conventions and Model Laws x = ratification, accession or enactment s = signature only

United Nations Conference on the Law of Treaties

KYOTO PROTOCOL STATUS OF RATIFICATION

( ) Page: 1/12 STATUS OF NOTIFICATIONS OF NATIONAL LEGISLATION ON CUSTOMS VALUATION AND RESPONSES TO THE CHECKLIST OF ISSUES

INTERNATIONAL AIR SERVICES TRANSIT AGREEMENT SIGNED AT CHICAGO ON 7 DECEMBER 1944

Election of Council Members

Committee for Development Policy Seventh Session March 2005 PURCHASING POWER PARITY (PPP) Note by the Secretariat

... 00:00:00,06 Elapsed Time

A Practical Guide To Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)

Transcription:

JOINT BANK-FUND UBRARY losure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized G Hll46.Gl W67 1970 C:2 JLC017323 G 1046.Gl W67 1970 World bank atlas 19... u..,,.. H ~~ II DRAWN POPULATION, PER CAPITA PRODUCT AND GROWTH RATES publlahecl by the lnternauon.. Bank lor Reconelructlon and Development 1970

world Bank Atlas 1970 his is the fifth edition of the World Bank Atlas. The tables of gross national product and population again evidence considerable economic expansion in most developing countries. They also show that much of the advance is being absorbed by high rates of population growth. In interpreting these figures, a word of caution is necessary. Taken by themselves, changes in gross national product per capita are far from adequate as indices of development progress. They tell only a part of the story of economic growth and say nothing about social and cultural change. It must also be underlined that they are in many cases based upon data which are approximate at best; and their conversion into US dollars introduces yet another source of error. Despite their limitations, the figures of gross national product are useful as indicators of levels of national income and of the pace of economic development. They are presented as such and highlight both the very real economic progress that has taken place in the developing world and the tremendous inequalities in wealth that exist between nations. These stark figures should bring home the need for an increasing world commitment to assist the developing countries in their efforts to improve the condition of life of their peoples. The tables were prepared by the National Accounts and Data Analysis Unit of the World Bank's Economics Department. A technical note discussing the methodology employed and explaining the tentative nature of the estimates is given on the last page. September 1970

Population (mid-1968) and Average Annual Growth Rate (1961-68) Countries with populations ot l million or more. COUNTRY POPULATION GROWTH RATE COUNTRY POPULATION GROWTH RATE COUNTRY POPULATION GROWTH RATE (thousands) (percent) (thousands) (percent) (thousands) (percent) CHINA (Mainland) 730,000 1.5 ALGERIA 12,943 2.3 HONG KONG 3,927 3.1 INDIA 523,893 2.5 PERU 12,772 3.1 NORWAY 3,819 0.8 USSR 237,798 1.3 NETHERLANDS 12,725 1.3 NIGER 3,806 3.6 UNITED STATES 201,152 1.4 TANZANIA 12,508 2.5 GUINEA 3,795 2.7 PAKISTAN 123,163 2.6 AUSTRALIA 12,031 2.0 SENEGAL 3,685 2.1 INDONESIA 112,825 2.4 CEYLON 11,970 2.4 CHAD 3,460 1.5 JAPAN 101,090 1.0 NEPAL 10,652 1.8 BURUNDI 3,406 2.0 BRAZIL 88,209 3.0 MALAYSIA 10,386 3.1 RWANDA 3,405 3.1 NIGERIA 62,650 2.4 HUNGARY 10,255 0.3 ELSALVADOR 3,267 3.6 GERMANY, FED. REP. OF 60,165 1.0 KENYA 10,209 2.9 IRELAND 2,910 0.3 UNITED KINGDOM 55,283 0.7 VENEZUELA 9,686 3.5 NEW ZEALAND 2,828 2.2 ITALY 52,750 0.8 BELGIUM 9,619 0.6 LAOS 2,825 2.4 FRANCE 49,920 1.1 PORTUGAL 9,465 0.9 URUGUAY 2,818 1.3 MEXICO 47,627 3.5 CHILE 9,351 2.5 SOMALIA 2,747 4.0 PHILIPPINES 35,883 3.4 GREECE 8,803 0.7 ISRAEL 2,745 3.3 THAILAND 33,693 3.1 IRAQ 8,634 2.8 PUERTO RICO 2,723 1.8 TURKEY 33,550 2.5 GHANA 8,376 2.7 LEBANON 2,580 2.6 SPAIN 32,621 0.9 BULGARIA 8,370 0.8 DAHOMEY 2,571 2.9 POLAND 32,305 1.1 CUBA 8,270 2.4 SIERRA LEONE 2,475 1.3 UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC 31,693 2.5 UGANDA 8,133 2.5 HONDURAS 2,413 3.4 KOREA, REPUBLIC OF 30,470 2.7 SWEDEN 7,918 0.7 PAPUA AND NEW GUINEA 2,300 2.4 IRAN 27,150 3.0 AUSTRIA 7,350 0.5 PARAGUAY 2,231 3.1 BURMA 26,353 2.1 MOZAMBIQUE 7,274 1.3 JORDAN 2,103 2.7 ETHIOPIA 24,212 2.0 SAUDI ARABIA 7,112 1.7 ALBANIA 2,019 2.9 ARGENTINA 23,617 1.6 CAMBODIA 7,087 3.4 SINGAPORE 1,988 2.5 CANADA 20,772 1.9 MALAGASY REPUBLIC 6,500 2.4 JAMAICA 1,908 2.0 VIET-NAM (North) 20,700 3.2 SWITZERLAND 6,147 1.7 NICARAGUA 1,848 3.4 YUGOSLAVIA 20,154 1.1 SYRIA 5,701 2.8 LIBYA 1,803 3.7 COLOMBIA 20,043 3.2 ECUADOR 5,695 3.4 TOGO 1,769 2.6 SOUTH AFRICA 19,781 2.3 CAMEROON 5,590 2.2 COSTA RICA 1,650 3.5 ROMANIA 19,721 0.9 YEMEN 5,440 2.1 CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC 1,488 2.4 VIET-NAM, REP. OF 17,414 2.7 ANGOLA 5,362 1.3 PANAMA 1,372 3.3 GERMANY (Eastern) 17,084-0.1 UPPER VOLTA 5,175 2.2 MONGOLIA 1,210 3.0 CONGO,DEM.REP.OF 16,730 2.1 SOUTHERN RHODESIA 4,940 3.2 SOUTHERN YEMEN 1,195 2.3 AFGHANISTAN 16,113 2.0 DENMARK 4,870 0.8 LIBERIA 1,130 1.7 SUDAN 14,770 2.9 GUATEMALA 4,864 3.1 MAURITANIA 1,120 1.8 MOROCCO 14,580 2.9 MALl 4,787 2.1 TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO 1,021 2.6 CZECHOSLOVAKIA 14,362 0.6 FINLAND 4,689 0.7 CHINA, REP. OF 13,466 3.0 BOLIVIA 4,680 2.6 KOREA (North) 13,000 2.6 HAITI 4,671 2.0 TUNISIA 4,660 2.3 MALAWI 4,270 2.6 IVORY COAST 4,100 2.8 ZAMBIA 4,065 3.0 DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 4,029 3.6

oross National Product Per capita (1888) and Average Annual orowth Rate (1881-88) Countries with populations of l million or more. Note: In view of the usual errors inherent In this type of data and to avoid a misleading impression of accuracy, the figures for GNP per capita have been rounded to the nearest $10. GROWTH GROWTH GROWTH COUNTRY GNP per CAPITA RATE COUNTRY GNP ~r CAPITA RATE COUNTRY GNP gar CAPITA RATE (US dollars) (percent)!u dollars)!e!rcent)!u dollars)!earcant) UNITED STATES 3,980 3.4 YUGOSLAVIA 510 4.2 SIERRA LEONE 150 1.5 SWEDEN 2,620 3.2 CHILE 480 1.8 THAILAND 150 4.6 SWITZERLAND 2,490 2.4 JAMAICA 460 0.8 CAMEROON 140 1.1 CANADA 2,460 2.8 PORTUGAL 460 5.0 KENYA 130 1.4 FRANCE 2,130 3.7 COSTA RICA 450 2.1 VIET-NAM, REP. OF 130 1.9 AUSTRALIA 2,070 2.4 MONGOLIAt 430 0.8 CAMBODIA 120 0.6 DENMARK 2,070 3.3 ALBANIAt 400 4.9 CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC 120-0.6 NEW ZEALAND 2,000 1.7 PERU 380 3.5 SOUTHERN YEMEN 120-4.9 NORWAY 2,000 4.1 NICARAGUA 370 3.8 UGANDA 110 1.1 GERMANY, FED. REP. OF 1,970 3.4 SAUDI ARABIA 360 7.2 INDIA 100 1.0 BELGIUM 1,810 3.2 MALAYSIA 330 4.3 INDONESIA 100 0.8 UNITED KINGDOM 1,790 2.0 GUATEMALA 320 1.7 LAOS" 100 0.2 FINLAND 1,720 3.2 COLOMBIA 310 1.4 MALAGASY REPUBLIC 100-0.2 NETHERLANDS 1,620 3.0 CUBAt 310-2.0 PAKISTAN 100 3.1 GERMANY (Eastern)t 1,430 4.0 IRAN 310 5.0 SUDAN 100-0.4 ISRAEL 1,360 4.7 TURKEY 310 3.2 TOGO 100 0.5 PUERTO RICO 1,340 5.9 DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 290 0.5 CHINA (Ma/nland)t 90 0.3 AUSTRIA 1,320 3.6 EL SALVADOR 280 2.1 CONGO,DEM.REP. OF 90-0.3 CZECHOSLOVAKIAt 1,240 3.7 CHINA, REP. OF 270 6.5 GUINEA 90 2.7 ITALY 1,230 4.6 HONDURAS 260 1.2 MALl 90 1.3 JAPAN 1,190 9.9 IRAQ 260 2.9 VIET-NAM (North)t 90 3.3 USSRt 1,110 5.8 IVORY COAST 260 4.8 AFGHANISTAN 80 LIBYA 1,020-0.3 19.4 JORDAN 260 4.8 DAHOMEY 80 1.1 HUNGARYt 980 5.2 BRAZIL 250 1.6 NEPAL 80 0.3 IRELAND 980 3.1 KOREA (North)t 250 5.9 TANZANIA 80 1.2 VENEZUELA 950 1.4 PARAGUAY 230 1.3 BURMA 70 PO LANDt 1.6 880 5.5 ALGERIA 220-3.5 ETHIOPIA 70 2.6 TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO 870 4.4 ECUADOR 220 1.2 HAITI 70 ARGENTINA -3.3 820 1.0 SOUTHERN RHODESIA 220-0.1 NIGER 70-1.6 ROMANIAt 780 7.8 TUNISIA 220 2.7 NIGERIA 70-0.3 BULGARIAt 770 6.7 ZAMBIA 220 3.6 RWANDA GREECE 70 1.5 740 5.9 LIBERIA 210 0.7 YEMEN SPAIN 70 2.0 730 6.5 PAPUA AND NEW GUINEA 210 2.5 CHAD HONG KONG 60-1.5 710 8.1 SYRIA 210 3.5 SOMALIA SINGAPORE 60 0.2 700 3.8 MOZAMBIQUE 200 3.6 BURUNDI 50 0.0 SOUTH AFRICA 650 3.7 ANGOLA 190 2.1 MALAWI PANAMA 50 2.2 580 4.6 MOROCCO 190 0.4 UPPER VOLTA LEBANON 50 0.1 560 2.4 CEYLON 180 2.3 MEXICO 530 3.4 KOREA, REP. OF 180 5.6 URUGUAY 520-1.4 MAURITANIA 180 11.3 PHILIPPINES 180 0.8 GHANA 170-0.7 Estimates of GNP per capita and /18 growth rats llllj tentative. SENEGAL 170-1.4 teat/metes of GNP per capita and /18 growth rata have a wide UNITED ARAB REP. 170 1.5 margin of error mainly because of the problems In deriving the GNP at factor coat from net mater/a/ product and In converting BOLIVIA 150 1.8 the GNP estimate Into US do/lara.

49 52 54 48 14 40 44

~ I ;J

~ (lllct-1-), GNP Per Capita (1118) 8lld AWI'tlge Annul Grow11a Raltle (1111-81) GAOWTH ":iq enpper I'PIR NO. COUNTRY POPULATION CAPITA POPULATION CAPITA (1,o00) (US.) C'-') (%) BIIIAZIL 81,208 210 8.0 1.8 MCIENI1IIA 23,117 120 1.8 1.0 COlO~ 20,048 310 3.2 1.4 PlllU 12,772 180 3.1 3.5 IIEZUELA 8,1M 850 3.5 1.4 CHILE 8,161 480 2.6 1.8 ICUADOR 5,085 220 3.4 1.2 BOLMA 4,880 150 2.8 1.8 URUGUAY 2,818 520 1.3-1.4 PARAGUAY 2,231 230 3.1 1.3 GUYANA 719 840 3.1-0.1 IUIUNAII 375 480 3.5 2.7 PRBCH CIUIANA 40 810 2.1 11.8 2

Technical Nota or purposes of inter-country comparison, F GNP per capita estimates in US dollar equivalents should be derived, ideally, from national currency figures on the basis of purchasing power parities or through direct real product comparisons. To date, however, a limited number of countries only have been covered by such studies, generally relating to different periods of time, and no framework exists for systematic estimation on a current basis. In the absence of such a framework, the present figures of GNP per capita In US dollars have been converted from the national currency estimates essentially on the basis of exchange rates. It should be pointed out that the use of exchange rates for this purpose may result in a considerable overstatement of product differences among countries, especially as between those in the highest and lowest income categories. A study carried out for India, for example, indicates that whereas at exchange rates US per capita product in 1959 exceeded that in India by a ratio of 30:1, a purchasing power parity calculation yielded a ratio of approximately 12:1. The reason for this lies primarily in the divergent price and product structures of different countries. Exchange rates, even when they approximate balance of payments equilibrium rates, equate at best the prices of internationally traded goods and services only. They may bear little relationship to the prices of non-internationally traded goods and serv Ices, which in most countries form the large bulk of the total national product. Specifically, the prices of agricultural products and of services in developing countries are in most cases considerably lower, relative to industrial prices, than in more developed countries. Moreover, agricultural output generally ac.; counts for the larger part of the overall national product In developing countries, while the opposite is true of developed countries. As a result, the internal purchasing power of the currency of a low income country will generally be greater than indicated by the exchange rate. The use of exchange rates for converting national currency estimates into US dollar equivalents is further complicated by the fact that the official or par value rates do not always constitute equilibrium rates. Countries experiencing substantial inflations frequently maintain pegged exchange rates over long periods, so that a straight conversion on the basis of the overvalued rates would overstate both the absolute level of the GNP in terms of US dollars and its increase over time. In order to try to minimize the possible distorting effect of such rates, the estimates presented here for 1968 have been computed as extrapolations of US dollar estimates previously determined for 1964. The 1964 estimates themselves were derived in most cases from the respective national currency figures, on the basis of the then prevailing official or par value exchange rates. In some instances, where the 1964 exchange rate appeared to be significantly out of line due to the effects of Inflation or other causes, rough adjustments were made in order to approximate what would appear to be an equilibrium exchange rate. The 1964 US dollar estimates, thus computed, were raised by the index of real GNP per capita growth in each country between 1964-1968 in order to obtain estimates for 1968 In 1964 US dollars. These were then adjusted to current 1968 US dollars on the basis of the Implicit GNP price deflator for the United States. The present estimates may thus differ from those that would be obtained by directly converting the 1968 domestic currency esti mates on the basis of current official or par value exchange rates. Special problems arise with regard to the estimates for the centrally planned (socialist) economies. The national accounts for these countries are compiled originally in terms of "net material product" and adjustments have to be made in order to derive approximate esti mates of GNP at factor cost. There is also the problem of selecting an appropriate exchange rate for conversion of the national currency estimate into US dollars, since the "basic" rates maintained by these countries are frequently far removed from hypothetical "equilibrium" rates. Finally, the indications are that, in the absence of market conditions, the internal cost and price relationships in these countries are even more than usually out of line with international prices. More than usual caution needs to be exercised, therefore, in using and interpreting the figures for these countries. For all countries, the GNP per capita estimates are given at factor cost rather than at current market prices. This procedure is followed in order to minimize as far as possible any distorting effect arising out of differing national taxation policies. The average annual growth rates given for 1961-68 are the compounded rates of growth between the initial and terminal years 1960 and 1968. Over an extended period, and except where marked cyclical or irregular factors are present, this method may generally be taken to yield a fair approximation of the trend.