Public finance
branch Government expenditures
As a percentage of GDP
  2008
Iceland 57.8   57.80 
France 52.7   52.70 
Sweden 51.8   51.80 
Denmark 51.5   51.50 
Belgium 50.1   50.10 
Hungary 49.2   49.20 
Finland 49.0   49.00 
Austria 48.9   48.90 
Italy 48.7   48.70 
Greece 48.3   48.30 
United Kingdom 47.5   47.50 
Portugal 46.0   46.00 
Netherlands 45.9   45.90 
Slovenia 44.2   44.20 
Germany 43.8   43.80 
Poland 43.3   43.30 
Czech Republic 42.1   42.10 
Ireland 42.0   42.00 
OECD total 41.4   41.40 
New Zealand 41.1   41.10 
Spain 41.1   41.10 
Norway 40.0   40.00 
Canada 39.7   39.70 
United States 38.8   38.80 
Brazil 37.9   37.90 
Luxembourg 37.7   37.70 
Japan 37.1   37.10 
Slovak Republic 34.7   34.70 
Australia 34.3   34.30 
Switzerland 32.0   32.00 
Korea 30.0   30.00 
Chile 21.2   21.20 

Definition

The net borrowing or net lending of the general government is the balancing item of the non-financial account for this sector (according to the 1993 System of National Accounts). It is also equal to the difference between total revenue and total expenditure, including capital expenditure. The general government sector consists mainly of central, state and local government units together with social security funds controlled by those units. The main revenue of general government consists of taxes, social contributions, dividends and other property income. The main expenditure items consist of the compensation of civil servants, social benefits, interest on the public debt, subsidies and gross fixed capital formation. A negative figure indicates a deficit.

The data shown here are on a national accounts basis. These may differ from the numbers reported to the European Commission under the excessive deficit procedure (EDP) for some EU countries and for some years.


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