Production and income
branch Gross domestic product
Billion US dollars, current prices and PPPs
  2008
OECD total 40135.5   40135.50 
EU27 total 15283.6   15283.60 
United States 14369.4   14369.40 
China 7926.5   7926.50 
Japan 4358.3   4358.30 
India 3297.8   3297.80 
Germany 2909.7   2909.70 
Russian Federation 2262.7   2262.70 
United Kingdom 2186.0   2186.00 
France 2121.7   2121.70 
Brazil 1984.5   1984.50 
Italy 1871.7   1871.70 
Mexico 1545.3   1545.30 
Spain 1434.2   1434.20 
Korea 1344.4   1344.40 
Canada 1300.2   1300.20 
Turkey 991.7   991.70 
Indonesia 909.7   909.70 
Australia 831.2   831.20 
Netherlands 675.1   675.10 
Poland 659.2   659.20 
South Africa 493.5   493.50 
Belgium 377.9   377.90 
Sweden 340.5   340.50 
Switzerland 329.9   329.90 
Greece 324.7   324.70 
Austria 315.6   315.60 
Norway 280.0   280.00 
Czech Republic 256.9   256.90 
Portugal 247.3   247.30 
Chile 243.0   243.00 
Israel 204.0   204.00 
Denmark 202.2   202.20 
Hungary 198.1   198.10 
Finland 190.8   190.80 
Ireland 184.4   184.40 
Slovak Republic 119.7   119.70 
New Zealand 116.4   116.40 
Slovenia 56.3   56.30 
Luxembourg 41.4   41.40 
Estonia 27.7   27.70 
Iceland 11.8   11.80 

Definition

What does gross domestic product mean? "Gross" signifies that no deduction has been made for the depreciation of machinery, buildings and other capital products used in production. "Domestic" means that it refers to production by the resident institutional units of each country. As many products are used to produce other products, GDP measures production in terms of value added.

GDP can be measured in three different ways: as output less intermediate consumption (i.e. value added) plus taxes on products (such as VAT) less subsidies on products; as income earned from production, obtained by summing employee compensation, the gross operating surplus of enterprises and government, the gross mixed income of unincorporated enterprises and net taxes on production and imports (VAT, payroll tax, import duties, etc, less subsidies); or as final expenditure on the goods and services produced, obtained by summing final consumption expenditures, gross fixed capital formation, changes in inventories and exports less imports.


For more statistics on economic, environmental and social issues visit online the OECD Factbook 2010.