china has only 3 GDP per person and only the ghost off poltergeist knows so you have to watch poltergeist
It is 4.6 GDP.
about 61,000 per person a year.
Per capita GDP is GDP per person - total for the country divided on the number of people living there.
Would you say that real GDP per person is a useful measure of economic well-being ?Defend your answer.
More savings produces greater additions to capital per hour of labor, raising real GDP per person.
Luxembourg of course.
Currently, Canada's GDP is $1.34 Trillion (US) and the population of Canada is 33,739,900 (2009) it would be around ( 1,340,000,000,000 / 33,739,900 = ) $39,715.59/person.
Gross Domestic Product per capita. Basically it's how much each person earns in a country.
Here is a list of the richest countries Luxembourg (GDP per capita: $119,719) Norway (GDP per capita: $86,362) Switzerland (GDP per capita: $83,832) Ireland (GDP per capita: $81,477) Iceland (GDP per capita: $78,181) Qatar (GDP per capita: $65,062) The United States of America (GDP per capita: $64,906) Denmark (GDP per capita: $63,434) Singapore (GDP per capita: $62,690) Australia (GDP per capita: $58,824) so I know the USA is the richest country but this is the richest countries by GDP.
if GDP grows faster than the population of a country, the per capita GDP will rise
GDP: gross domestic product; basically how much money taken by the country from within itself. Real GDP: * definition waiting. Per capita GDP: The GDP divided by the population. A good estimate of how much each person makes - a larger population with a fairly large GDP might appear to be better off, but a lower per capita GDP indicates that it is not as good as a smalller country with higher per capita GDP.
I think you should divide total GDP of the country to the population of that country. GDP is given in Billions and population is given in Millions. Divide GDP by Population, then multiply answer by 1000. It should work the same way using real GDP numbers