Adjusted net national income (annual % growth) - Country Ranking

Definition: Adjusted net national income is GNI minus consumption of fixed capital and natural resources depletion.

Source: World Bank staff estimates based on sources and methods described in "The Changing Wealth of Nations 2018: Building a Sustainable Future" (Lange et al 2018).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Eritrea 349.61 2011
2 Timor-Leste 52.43 2019
3 Ethiopia 26.34 2019
4 Dem. Rep. Congo 21.75 2019
5 Bangladesh 15.92 2019
6 Lao PDR 13.63 2016
7 Seychelles 11.58 2017
8 Romania 10.13 2019
9 Sierra Leone 10.06 2019
10 Rwanda 9.92 2019
11 Cambodia 9.78 2019
12 Burkina Faso 9.74 2019
13 Ghana 9.05 2019
14 Mali 8.97 2019
15 Iceland 8.87 2019
16 Uganda 8.73 2019
17 Mongolia 8.64 2019
18 Benin 8.00 2019
19 Nepal 7.97 2019
20 Djibouti 7.84 2018
21 Thailand 7.77 2003
22 Malaysia 7.75 2019
23 Kazakhstan 7.74 2019
24 Myanmar 7.40 2019
25 Central African Republic 7.26 2019
26 Solomon Islands 7.18 2019
27 Togo 6.99 2019
28 Mauritania 6.72 2019
29 Bulgaria 6.60 2019
30 Vietnam 6.58 2019
31 Tanzania 6.41 2019
32 Iraq 6.34 2019
33 Hungary 6.26 2019
34 Dominican Republic 6.25 2019
35 Brunei 6.06 2019
36 Guinea 5.94 2019
37 Guatemala 5.79 2019
38 Cabo Verde 5.76 2019
39 The Gambia 5.75 2019
40 Armenia 5.73 2019
41 Poland 5.67 2019
42 Côte d'Ivoire 5.64 2019
43 El Salvador 5.51 2019
44 Bhutan 5.40 2019
45 Ireland 5.32 2019
46 Peru 5.20 2019
47 Senegal 5.11 2019
48 Vanuatu 5.10 2019
49 Egypt 4.90 2019
50 Cameroon 4.90 2019
51 Georgia 4.87 2019
52 The Bahamas 4.85 2019
53 Montenegro 4.84 2019
54 Lithuania 4.80 2019
55 Israel 4.76 2019
56 Niger 4.74 2019
57 Chad 4.71 2019
58 India 4.71 2019
59 New Zealand 4.68 2019
60 Comoros 4.49 2018
61 Bosnia and Herzegovina 4.36 2019
62 Kenya 4.30 2019
63 Moldova 4.22 2019
64 Philippines 4.18 2019
65 Croatia 4.17 2019
66 Indonesia 4.09 2019
67 Slovenia 4.05 2019
68 Estonia 4.02 2019
69 Gabon 4.01 2019
70 Serbia 3.97 2019
71 Guinea-Bissau 3.82 2019
72 China 3.80 2019
73 Colombia 3.71 2019
74 Jordan 3.69 2019
75 Mauritius 3.68 2019
76 Cyprus 3.61 2019
77 Sweden 3.56 2019
78 Algeria 3.55 2019
79 Mozambique 3.53 2019
80 North Macedonia 3.52 2019
81 Morocco 3.52 2019
82 Latvia 3.47 2019
83 Ukraine 3.43 2019
84 Bolivia 3.39 2019
85 Belize 3.29 2019
86 Kyrgyz Republic 3.22 2019
87 Belgium 2.92 2019
88 Belarus 2.87 2019
89 Saudi Arabia 2.82 2019
90 Portugal 2.79 2019
91 Chile 2.71 2019
92 Greece 2.68 2019
93 Honduras 2.64 2019
94 Kiribati 2.57 2018
95 Burundi 2.52 2019
96 Canada 2.42 2019
97 Denmark 2.35 2019
98 Czech Republic 2.31 2019
99 Bahrain 2.19 2019
100 Tunisia 2.16 2018
101 Slovak Republic 2.00 2019
102 Spain 1.99 2019
103 United States 1.87 2019
104 Tajikistan 1.86 2013
105 Brazil 1.85 2019
106 Panama 1.83 2019
107 Switzerland 1.73 2019
108 Papua New Guinea 1.68 2004
109 France 1.66 2019
110 Azerbaijan 1.65 2012
111 Austria 1.62 2019
112 Jamaica 1.61 2019
113 Netherlands 1.55 2019
114 Costa Rica 1.53 2019
115 Uruguay 1.53 2019
116 Pakistan 1.35 2019
117 South Africa 1.28 2019
118 United Kingdom 1.15 2018
119 Namibia 1.14 2019
120 Mexico 0.98 2019
121 Germany 0.97 2019
122 Finland 0.94 2019
123 Cuba 0.86 2018
124 Albania 0.73 2019
125 Italy 0.36 2019
126 Angola 0.27 2019
127 Madagascar 0.26 2019
128 Sri Lanka 0.24 2019
129 Japan 0.20 2019
130 Sudan 0.20 2019
131 Botswana 0.18 2019
132 United Arab Emirates 0.16 2019
133 Russia -0.19 2019
134 Paraguay -0.20 2019
135 Lesotho -0.52 2019
136 Ecuador -0.57 2019
137 Nicaragua -0.66 2019
138 Kuwait -0.78 2019
139 Korea -0.81 2019
140 Haiti -0.90 2019
141 Nigeria -0.92 2019
142 Qatar -2.63 2019
143 Eswatini -3.16 2019
144 Norway -3.32 2019
145 Iran -3.52 2019
146 Oman -3.88 2019
147 Argentina -4.77 2019
148 Zimbabwe -5.38 2018
149 Somalia -5.85 1989
150 Luxembourg -6.26 2019
151 Lebanon -8.88 2019
152 Equatorial Guinea -12.33 2019
153 Venezuela -23.41 2014
154 Congo -28.31 2019
155 Tonga -42.15 2019

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Development Relevance: Adjusted net national income is particularly useful in monitoring low-income, resource-rich economies, like many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, because such economies often see large natural resources depletion as well as substantial exports of resource rents to foreign mining companies. For recent years adjusted net national income gives a picture of economic growth that is strikingly different from the one provided by GDP. The key to increasing future consumption and thus the standard of living lies in increasing national wealth - including not only the traditional measures of capital (such as produced and human capital), but also natural capital. Natural capital comprises such assets as land, forests, and subsoil resources. All three types of capital are key to sustaining economic growth. By accounting for the consumption of fixed and natural capital depletion, adjusted net national income better measures the income available for consumption or for investment to increase a country's future consumption.

Limitations and Exceptions: Adjusted net national income differs from the adjustments made in the calculation of adjusted net savings, by not accounting for investments in human capital or the damages from pollution. Thus, adjusted net national income remains within the boundaries of the United Nations System of National Accounts (SNA). The SNA includes non-produced natural assets (such as land, mineral resources, and forests) within the asset boundary when they are under the effective control of institutional units. The calculation of adjusted net national income, which accounts for net forest, energy, and mineral depletion, as well as consumption of fixed capital, thus remains within the SNA boundaries. This point is critical because it allows for comparisons across GDP, GNI, and adjusted net national income; such comparisons reveal the impact of natural resource depletion, which is otherwise ignored by the popular economic indicators.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Adjusted net national income complements gross national income (GNI) in assessing economic progress (Hamilton and Ley 2010) by providing a broader measure of national income that accounts for the depletion of natural resources. Adjusted net national income is calculated by subtracting from GNI a charge for the consumption of fixed capital (a calculation that yields net national income) and for the depletion of natural resources. The deduction for the depletion of natural resources, which covers net forest depletion, energy depletion, and mineral depletion, reflects the decline in asset values associated with the extraction and harvesting of natural resources. This is analogous to depreciation of fixed assets. Growth rates of adjusted net national income are computed from constant price series deflated using the gross national expenditure (formerly domestic absorption) deflator.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual