GDP per inhabitant in 2005
GDP per inhabitant varied by one
to five across the EU25 Member States
STAT/06/79
15 June 2006
Nowcasts of purchasing power parities1 (PPP) for 2005 are now
available. Based on these nowcasts, GDP per inhabitant2 in Luxembourg3 was more than twice the EU25 average in 2005. Ireland was nearly 40% above average, while Denmark, the Netherlands, Austria and Belgium were around 20% above
average. The United Kingdom and Sweden were 15% above
average, and Finland, Germany and France about 10% above
average. Italy and Spain were around the EU25 average.
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Cyprus, Greece and Slovenia were about 20% below
average. The Czech Republic, Portugal and Malta were
around 30% below average, and Hungary and Estonia about 40% below. Slovakia, Lithuania, Poland and Latvia were around
half the EU25 average.
These figures for GDP per inhabitant, expressed in terms of purchasing power
standards4 (PPS), are published by Eurostat, the
Statistical Office of the European Communities.
GDP per inhabitant in 2005 in PPS, EU25 = 100
EU25 Member States, Acceding, Candidate and EFTA
countries5
Luxembourg |
248 |
Czech Republic |
73 |
Ireland |
137 |
Portugal |
71 |
Denmark |
124 |
Malta |
69 |
Netherlands |
123 |
Hungary |
61 |
Austria |
123 |
Estonia |
57 |
Belgium |
118 |
Slovakia |
55 |
United Kingdom |
115 |
Lithuania |
52 |
Sweden |
115 |
Poland |
50 |
Finland |
112 |
Latvia |
47 |
Germany |
110 |
Romania |
35 |
France |
109 |
Bulgaria |
32 |
Euro area |
106 |
Croatia |
47 |
Italy |
103 |
Turkey |
31 |
EU25 |
100 |
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia |
26 |
Spain |
99 |
Cyprus |
83 |
Norway |
165 |
Greece |
82 |
Switzerland |
128 |
Slovenia |
80 |
Iceland |
126 |
- The regular publication schedule of Purchasing Power Parities (PPP) includes
four estimates for a particular year, each of them including GDP per inhabitant.
Taking 2005 as an example, the first estimate (nowcast), based on projections,
is published in mid-June 2006. At the end of 2006, the second estimate
(preliminary data) will be published, partly based on prices collected in 2005.
The third estimate will become available by end-2007 and the fourth (final data)
by end-2008. Between PPP estimates, revisions to national accounts data may also
lead to revised GDP per inhabitant figures. The nowcasts of PPP, used for GDP
per capita for 2005 presented in this News Release, have a provisional
character. This provisional status arises from the input data availability
at the point in time of nowcasting.
The GDP per inhabitant figures
in national currency are converted, using PPP, to “real” volumes.
Two main basic data sets are required for the calculation of PPP: prices from
the PPP price surveys and weights (GDP expenditure) from National Accounts (NA).
Fully validated results of PPP price surveys are usually available only 12
months after the survey has been executed. At the point in time when the
nowcasting is undertaken (t+5.5 months), only partly validated price data are
available from price surveys for the reference year in question. NA information
on main expenditure aggregates becomes available for the first time by
March-April following the reference year. At this point in time, it is limited
to a few main aggregates. For the aggregation of PPP more detailed expenditure
weights are necessary, so that the detailed expenditure structure of the year
2004 is used to estimate detailed weights for 2005 by scaling it to the newly
available information for 2005 at main aggregates level.
- GDP, and thus GDP per inhabitant, provides a measure of the total economic
activity in a country. It may be used to compare the degree of economic
development of countries. Most EU Member States have recently adapted their
national accounts to comply with methodological improvements agreed upon
internationally. One important change is the allocation of “financial
intermediation services indirectly measured” (FISIM) to user sectors. The
Czech Republic, Cyprus and the United Kingdom have not published GDP including
this allocation of FISIM for 2005 yet, and neither have Bulgaria, Croatia,
Turkey, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Switzerland and Norway. To
the extent that FISIM are recorded as final consumption and net export, GDP
levels increase by the allocation by around 0.5% to 2.0% of GDP. Comparability
of data for these countries is hence reduced.
GDPs per inhabitant in
PPS provide an indication of the comparative order of magnitude of the total
economic activity one country in relation to others. The level of uncertainty
associated with the basic price and NA data, and the methods used for compiling
PPPs imply that strict ranking of countries is not advisable.
- The high level of GDP per inhabitant in Luxembourg is partly due to the
large share of cross-border workers in total employment. While contributing to
GDP, they are not taken into consideration as part of the resident population
which is used to calculate GDP per inhabitant.
- The PPS (purchasing power standard) is an artificial currency that takes
into account differences in national price levels. This unit allows meaningful
volume comparisons of economic indicators over countries. Aggregates expressed
in PPS are derived by dividing aggregates in current prices and national
currency by the respective Purchasing Power Parity (PPP).
- Acceding Countries: Bulgaria, Romania. Candidate Countries: Croatia, the
former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Turkey. EFTA: Iceland, Norway and
Switzerland. No data available for
Liechtenstein.
Issued by:
Eurostat Press Office
Tim
ALLEN
BECH Building
L-2920 LUXEMBOURG
Tel:
+352-4301-33 444
Fax: +352-4301 35-349
eurostat-pressoffice@ec.europa.eu
Eurostat
news releases on the Internet:
http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/
For further information on the data:
Peeter
LEETMAA
Tel: +352-4301-34 558
Fax: +352-4301-33
989
peeter.leetmaa@ec.europa.eu
Ingo
KUHNERT
Tel: +352-4301-35 234
Fax: +352-4301-33
879
Estat-gdp-query@ec.europa.eu
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