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Under which condition does a country with a small GDP have a large per capita income?

User AceN
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GDP, or gross domestic product, is how many goods and services a country or realm produces over an interval, usually a year.

the per capita part, means, the average per person, so you grab the GDP, say 5 trillion, and divide it evenly among all inhabitants, so a per-capita figure is really just GDP/population.

now, you can have a population like Germany with 80 million with a GDP of say hmmm 8000 million for simplification, the per-capita is then 8000/80 or $100 per person.

now, you could have another population like say Japan, and let's just say is less people... hmmm 20 million, with a GDP of say 4000 million.

then the per-capita in that example for Japan will be 4000/20, which is $200 per-capita, notice, the Japan's example has a higher per-capita, though the GDP is smaller to the example of Germany, that's because the Japanese population is also smaller.

sidenote: per-capita figures are often very misleading, since economies do not grow that linearly.
User Beasly
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the concept here is that if a country has a small population, then the per capita income would be large. by dividing the total income by the total population giving you the per capita income.

-hope this helps
User Lkopo
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