Top 100 Richest Countries In The World - Global Finance Magazine (2024)

What does it mean for a nation to be rich or poor at a time of global pandemic, high inflation and geopolitical tensions? GDP per capita adjusted for relative purchasing power gives us an idea, albeit an imperfect one.


Would you rather be rich in a poor country or poor in a rich one? Measuring the wealth of nations is not that easy (spoiler: it is not just about gross domestic product, or GDP). Determining how rich you are depends to a large degree on how rich andpoor countriesare defined.

If we simply consider a nation’s gross domestic product—the sum of all goods and services produced by a country during one year—then we would have to conclude that the richest nations are exactly the ones with the largest GDP: United States, China, Japan, Germany. But how could the economies, for example, of Singapore or Luxembourg ever match that of such powerhouses when they are no more than small dots on the world map?

Another problem with GDP is that it does not measureincome inequality, that is, how a country’s riches are distributed among the population. That is why a more accurate representation of people’s living conditions begins with dividing a nation’s GDP by the number of people that live there: per capita GDP and its growth rate tell us much more about the social wealth potentially available to each person and whether this wealth is either increasing or decreasing over time.

However, using per capita GDP still poses a problem: the very same income can buy very little in some countries and go much further in others where basic necessities—food, clothing, shelter, or healthcare—cost far less. To gauge how wealthy a country’s citizens areit is necessary to understand how much they can buy. That is why, when comparing per capita GDP across countries, GDP should be adjusted for purchasing power parity, which helps us take into account the inflation rates and the price of goods and services in each given place.

When considering whether it is better to be rich in a poor country or poor in a rich one, the best chance of enjoying a superior standard of living is to reside in a richer nation no matter where a person falls on the income distribution scale. Then again, wealth for some without a good measure of equality for everyone is problematic, to say the least. The coronavirus pandemic proved it most strikingly. Low-income workers, often migrants, living in some very wealthy nations suddenly found themselves unemployed, homeless and stranded without much of a safety net. Many less affluent nations, in the meantime, bent over backwards to take care of all those in need during the crisis.

Further, the quality and availability of healthcare often go hand in hand with the quality and availability of education services, social security, housing assistance and other components of the social infrastructure. A country might boast a high GDP or a high GDP per capita but, if such services are inadequate or inaccessible to a significant portion of the population, these citizens will feel poor, regardless of theeconomic indicators might suggest.

Additionally, when it comes to inflation, because energy and food are essential goods with few substitutes higher prices are particularly painful for low-income households. It is easier for families to cut down or eliminate spending on electronics, clothing or entertainment when prices surge, but when it comes to food, heating or transportation—crucial to both live and earn a living—this becomes much more difficult. As a result, an inflationary scenario can often pose a threat to economic and social stability.

This is why, in the long run, it is better not only to be rich but to beegalitarianas well. Too much economic inequality stifles growth for all, political instability is more likely, healthcare care costs and mortality rates are higher, and so are crime and corruption rates. Being rich in a poor countryalso has costs.

World’s 100 Richest Countries 2024

RankCountry/TerritoryGDP-PPP per capita ($)
1🇱🇺Luxembourg143,743
2🇲🇴Macao SAR134,141
3🇮🇪Ireland133,895
4🇸🇬Singapore133,737
5🇶🇦Qatar112,283
6🇦🇪United Arab Emirates96,846
7🇨🇭Switzerland91,932
8🇸🇲San Marino86,989
9🇺🇸United States85,373
10🇳🇴Norway82,832
11🇬🇾Guyana80,137
12🇩🇰Denmark77,641
13🇧🇳Brunei Darussalam77,534
14🇹🇼Taiwan76,858
15🇭🇰Hong Kong SAR75,128
16🇳🇱Netherlands74,158
17🇮🇸Iceland73,784
18🇸🇦Saudi Arabia70,333
19🇦🇹Austria69,460
20🇸🇪Sweden69,177
21🇦🇩Andorra69,146
22🇧🇪Belgium68,079
23🇲🇹Malta67,682
24🇩🇪Germany67,245
25🇦🇺Australia66,627
26🇧🇭Bahrain62,671
27🇫🇮Finland60,851
28🇨🇦Canada60,495
29🇫🇷France60,339
30🇰🇷South Korea59,330
31🇬🇧United Kingdom58,880
32🇨🇾Cyprus58,733
33🇮🇹Italy56,905
34🇮🇱Israel55,533
35🇦🇼Aruba54,716
36🇯🇵Japan54,184
37🇳🇿New Zealand53,797
38🇸🇮Slovenia53,287
39🇰🇼Kuwait52,274
40🇪🇸Spain52,012
41🇱🇹Lithuania50,600
42🇨🇿Czech Republic50,475
43🇵🇱Poland49,060
44🇵🇹Portugal47,070
45🇧🇸The Bahamas46,524
46🇭🇷Croatia45,702
47🇭🇺Hungary45,692
48🇪🇪Estonia45,122
49🇵🇦Panama44,797
50🇸🇰Slovak Republic44,081
51🇹🇷Türkiye43,921
52🇵🇷Puerto Rico43,219
53🇷🇴Romania43,179
54🇸🇨Seychelles43,151
55🇱🇻Latvia41,730
56🇬🇷Greece41,188
57🇴🇲Oman39,859
58🇲🇾Malaysia39,030
59🇰🇳St. Kitts and Nevis38,870
60🇷🇺Russia38,292
61🇲🇻Maldives37,433
62🇧🇬Bulgaria35,963
63🇰🇿Kazakhstan34,534
64🇹🇹Trinidad and Tobago32,685
65🇲🇺Mauritius32,094
66🇨🇱Chile31,005
67🇺🇾Uruguay30,170
68🇲🇪Montenegro29,696
69🇨🇷Costa Rica28,558
70🇷🇸Serbia27,985
71🇦🇬Antigua and Barbuda27,309
72🇩🇴Dominican Republic27,120
73🇱🇾Libya26,456
74🇦🇷Argentina26,390
75🇲🇽Mexico25,963
76🇧🇾Belarus25,685
77🇬🇪Georgia25,248
78🇨🇳China25,015
79🇹🇭Thailand23,401
80🇲🇰North Macedonia22,249
81🇬🇩Grenada21,799
82🇦🇲Armenia21,746
83🇮🇷Islamic Republic of Iran21,220
84🇧🇷Brazil20,809
85🇦🇱Albania20,632
86🇧🇦Bosnia and Herzegovina20,623
87🇧🇧Barbados20,592
88🇧🇼Botswana20,097
89🇨🇴Colombia19,770
90🇹🇲Turkmenistan19,729
91🇱🇨St. Lucia19,718
92🇬🇦Gabon19,452
93🇦🇿Azerbaijan19,328
94🇻🇨St. Vincent and the Grenadines19,196
95🇸🇷Suriname18,928
96🇬🇶Equatorial Guinea18,378
97🇲🇩Moldova17,902
98🇪🇬Egypt17,614
99🇫🇯Fiji17,403
100🇵🇼Palau17,381

Source: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook April 2024. Values are expressed in current international dollars, reflecting the corresponding exchange rates and PPP adjustments.

Top 100 Richest Countries In The World - Global Finance Magazine (2024)
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