ICAEW chart of the week: Global GDP

My chart for ICAEW this week looks at the relationship between population and GDP around the world.

A three column chart each adding up to 100% with the central bar showing percentages of the global population, the left-hand bar showing percentages of market GDP. and the right-hand bar showing percentage of power-purchasing-parity (PPP) GDP. The bars are linked with lines to emphasise the relative proportions. 

US & Canada: Market GDP 29% - Population 5% - PPP GDP 16%. 
Europe: Market GDP 23% - Population 7% - PPP GDP 18%. 
China: Market GDP 17% - Population 17% - PPP GDP 20%.  
Rest of the world: Market GDP 24% - Population 28% - PPP GDP 30%. 
South Asia & China: Market GDP 7% - Population 43% - PPP GDP 16%. 

27 Jun 2025. Chart by Martin Wheatcroft. Design by Sunday. Source: IMF, 'World Economic Outlook Database, Apr 2025'.

According to the latest World Economic Outlook Database published by the International Monetary Fund in April 2025, the 387m people that live in the US and Canada, some 5% of the global population of 8.1bn, are together expected to generate about 29% of global economic activity as measured by GDP converted at market exchange rates in 2025. 

The US – the largest economy in the world – is expected to generate 27% with 4.3% of the global population, while Canada with 0.5% of the world’s people represents 2% of the global economy.

My chart this week also shows how the US and Canada together constitute 16% of the global economy using GDP converted on a Purchasing-Power-Parity (PPP) basis that adjusts for the relative cost of living between countries. The US is the world’s second largest economy on this basis with 15% of total economic output, while Canada represents 1.3% of the total.

Europe’s 602m people are 7% of the global population (excluding Russia, but including Georgia) and are expected to generate around 23% of global economic output at market exchange rates in 2025 or around 18% on a PPP basis. 

This includes the 452m people or 5.6% of the total living in the EU that generate 18% of global output or 14% on a PPP basis, the second largest economy on a market exchange rate basis and the third largest after adjusting for purchasing power. Germany with 1% population generates 4.3% and 3% of market GDP and PPP GDP respectively, followed by France (0.8% generating 2.9% and 2.2%), Italy (0.7% generating 2.2% and 1.8%), Spain (0.6% generating 1.6% and 1.4%), the Netherlands (0.2% generating 1.2% and 0.7%) and Poland (0.5% generating 0.9% and 1%). 

Outside the EU, the 70m people in the UK, 0.9% of the world’s total, generate 3.4% of global economic activity on a market exchange rate basis and 2.2% on a purchasing power basis.

China’s 1.4bn people constitute 17% of the world’s population and generate 17% of market GDP, in effect the average level of global economic activity on a per capita basis at current exchange rates. However, on a cost-of-living adjusted basis, they are the world’s biggest economy at 20% of PPP GDP and above average on a per capita basis.

The chart groups the rest of East Asia, South East Asia, Oceania, the Middle East, Russia, Central Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean into a ‘rest of the world’ category with 2.3bn people or 28% of the world’s population. They generate 24% of the global economy on a market exchange rate basis and 30% on a purchasing power basis.

This category includes the 10 ASEAN countries in South East Asia that together make up 8.5% of the world’s population, 3.6% of market GDP and 6.4% of PPP GDP led by Indonesia (3.5%, 1.2% and 1.4%). Others include Japan (1.5% population, 3.6% market GDP and 3.3% PPP GDP), Russia (1.5%, 2.3% and 3.5%), Türkiye (1.3%, 1.1% and 1.8%), Mexico (1.6%, 1.6% and 1.6%), South Korea (0.6%, 1.6% and 1.6%), Australia (0.3%, 1.5% and 1%), Brazil (2.6%, 1.0% and 2.4%), Taiwan POC (0.3%, 1% and 0.8%) and Saudi Arabia (0.4%, 0.8% and 1%).

The final category is South Asia and Africa, which together include many of the poorest countries on Earth, with 43% of the global population but just 7% of the global economy based on market exchange rates and 16% on a cost-of-living adjusted basis.

South Asia’s 2bn people are 24.3% of the world’s population, generating 4.4% of market GDP and 10.3% of PPP GDP. This includes India’s 1.5bn people (17.9% of the global population generating 3.6% and 8.5% respectively), the world’s fifth largest national economy at market exchange rates behind the US, China, Germany and Japan, and the third largest on a PPP basis behind China and the US. It also includes Pakistan (3% of the world’s people generating 0.3% and 0.8% of economic activity) and Bangladesh (2.1% generating 0.4% and 0.9%).

Africa’s 1.5bn people constitute 18.3% of the world’s total, generating just 2.7% of market GDP and only 5.3% of PPP GDP. This includes South Africa (0.8%, 0.4% and 0.5%), Egypt (1.3%, 0.3% and 1.1%), Nigeria (2.9%, 0.2% and 0.8%), Ethiopia (1.4%, 0.1% and 0.2%) and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (1.3%, 0.1% and 0.1%).

The chart illustrates how economic activity, both before and after adjusting for purchasing power, is weighted towards the US and Europe, while South Asia and Africa have a long way to go to become as prosperous.

While this may seem a stiff mountain to climb economically, China’s transformation over the last 30 years provides an example of what is possible, especially as ageing populations in many developed countries reduce their ability to grow as quickly as those countries with much younger demographics such as in South Asia and Africa.

As they say, watch this space.

This chart was originally published by ICAEW.

ICAEW chart of the week: World population

My chart for ICAEW this week looks at how a declining fertility rate means the global population is now anticipated to reach a peak of ‘just’ 10.3bn in 2084, according to the UN.

World population.
ICAEW chart of the week. 

Column chart showing the world’s population in 2000, 2025, 2050, 2075 and 2100. 

Europe and Middle East – 0.8bn, 0.9bn, 1.0bn, 1.0bn and 1.0bn. 
Americas – 0.8bn, 1.1bn, 1.2bn, 1.2bn and 1.1bn. 
Asia-Pacific – 2.1bn, 2.4bn, 2.3bn, 1.9bn and 1.5bn. 
South and Central Asia – 1.7bn, 2.3bn, 2.7bn, 2.9bn and 2.8bn. 
Africa – 0.8bn, 1.5bn, 2.5bn, 3.3bn and 3.8bn. 

Total – 6.2bn, 8.2bn, 9.7bn, 10.3bn (10,250m) and 10.2bn (10,180m), with a peak of 10.3bn (10,289m) in 2084. 

For the purposes of this chart, Europe and Middle East comprises Europe and Western Asia as defined by the UN but excludes Russia and Northern Africa, Asia-Pacific comprises Eastern Asia, Southeastern Asia and Oceania, and South and Central Asia comprises Southern Asia, Central Asia and Russia. 


18 Jul 2024.   Chart by Martin Wheatcroft FCA. Design by Sunday. 

Source: UN Department of Economic Affairs, ‘World Population Prospects’. 


© ICAEW 2024

The Population Division of the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) recently published its latest population projections for the 21st century. Its central projection is for the world’s population to increase from 8.2bn next year to a peak of 10.3bn in 2084 in 2084 before falling slightly to 10.2bn at the end of the century.

This means that the population will have increased by 2.0bn between 2000 and 2025 and is projected to increase by 1.5bn over the next 25 years to 9.7bn in 2050 and by 0.6bn to 10.3bn in 2075, before gradually starting to fall from 2084 onwards.

My chart illustrates how this change differs by region, with the population of Africa expected to grow throughout the century from 1.5bn in 2025 to 3.8bn in 2100. South and Central Asia, which has seen its population grow from 1.7bn in 2000 to an anticipated 2.3bn next year, is expected to see further growth to 2.9bn in 2075 before then falling to 2.8bn in 2100, while the population of the Asia-Pacific region is expected to increase from 2.1bn in 2000 to 2.4bn in 2025, is expected to fall gradually from 2030 onwards to 1.5bn in 2100.

The population of the Americas is expected to grow slightly from 1.1bn in 2025 (up from 0.8bn in 2000) to 1.2bn before falling back to 1.1bn by 2100, while Europe and Middle East’s population is expected to increase from 0.9bn in 2025 (up from 0.8bn in 2000) to close to 1.0bn in 2050 and for the rest of the century.

UN DESA says the main driver of global population increase over the next 60 years until it peaks is the momentum created by growth in the past, with increases in the number of women of reproductive age until the late 2050s offsetting a declining fertility rate – currently one child fewer on average than in the 1990s (2.25 live births per woman currently compared with 3.31 in 1990). They also project that the number of people aged 65 will reach 2.2bn in 2080, surpassing the number of children under 18 in that year.

The declining fertility rate is one reason that the UN are projecting that the world’s population in 2100 will be 700m or 6% smaller than they were anticipating a decade ago, despite life expectancy starting to increase again after falling during the COVID-19 pandemic.

For some countries and areas, the declines in population are expected to be quite significant over the remainder of the century, such as the populations of China and Japan, which are expected to reduce from 1,416m to 633m and from 123m to 77m between 2025 and 2100 respectively. Meanwhile India is expected to grow from a population of 1,464m in 2025 to a peak of 1,701m in 2061 before falling to 1,505m in 2100.

Many other countries and areas have already or will shortly see their populations start to decline, except for about 52 countries and areas up until 2054, and 62 up until 2100, where immigration will be the main driver of population growth. The latter includes the UK, where the population is expected to rise from 70m in 2025 to a peak of 76m in 2073 before falling to 74m in 2100, and the US, expected to grow from 347m in 2025 to 421m in 2100.

According to the analysis by the UN, there are around 100 countries and areas (out of the 237 included in their analysis) with relatively youthful populations over the next half century that have a window of opportunity to accelerate their economic development. This ‘demographic dividend’ occurs when the share of the population of working ages is increasing faster than the overall population and a substantial and sustained decline in fertility increases the numbers available to work, assuming the countries concerned can put in the investment needed to take advantage of this opportunity.

This chart was originally published by ICAEW.