GDP per person employed (constant 2011 PPP $) - Country Ranking - Europe

Definition: GDP per person employed is gross domestic product (GDP) divided by total employment in the economy. Purchasing power parity (PPP) GDP is GDP converted to 2011 constant international dollars using PPP rates. An international dollar has the same purchasing power over GDP that a U.S. dollar has in the United States.

Source: International Labour Organization, ILOSTAT database. Data retrieved in September 2019.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Luxembourg 235,154.30 2020
2 Ireland 198,772.10 2020
3 Norway 125,886.00 2020
4 Switzerland 125,155.80 2020
5 Belgium 115,618.50 2020
6 Denmark 113,933.10 2020
7 Austria 105,350.20 2020
8 Sweden 104,718.80 2020
9 Netherlands 103,799.70 2020
10 Finland 102,933.40 2020
11 France 102,454.70 2020
12 Italy 101,904.90 2020
13 Germany 100,861.70 2020
14 Iceland 95,141.96 2020
15 Spain 88,307.95 2020
16 Turkey 87,147.47 2020
17 United Kingdom 86,412.31 2020
18 Slovenia 79,525.98 2020
19 Czech Republic 78,458.29 2020
20 Malta 78,230.33 2020
21 Lithuania 76,626.20 2020
22 Greece 73,451.73 2020
23 Estonia 71,199.12 2020
24 Poland 70,352.37 2020
25 Portugal 67,974.24 2020
26 Croatia 67,130.76 2020
27 Hungary 66,689.14 2020
28 Slovak Republic 65,570.09 2020
29 Romania 65,356.88 2020
30 Latvia 63,553.46 2020
31 Cyprus 59,468.93 2020
32 Montenegro 50,865.80 2020
33 Bulgaria 49,765.56 2020
34 Bosnia and Herzegovina 47,051.66 2020
35 Serbia 43,931.91 2020
36 North Macedonia 43,883.49 2020
37 Belarus 38,009.86 2020
38 Moldova 37,783.44 2020
39 Albania 31,821.78 2020
40 Ukraine 27,835.27 2020

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Development Relevance: Labor productivity is used to assess a country's economic ability to create and sustain decent employment opportunities with fair and equitable remuneration. Productivity increases obtained through investment, trade, technological progress, or changes in work organization can increase social protection and reduce poverty, which in turn reduce vulnerable employment and working poverty. Productivity increases do not guarantee these improvements, but without them - and the economic growth they bring - improvements are highly unlikely. GDP per person employed is a key measure to monitor whether a country is on track to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal of promoting sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all. [SDG Indicator 8.2.1]

Limitations and Exceptions: For comparability of individual sectors labor productivity is estimated according to national accounts conventions. However, there are still significant limitations on the availability of reliable data. Information on consistent series of output in both national currencies and purchasing power parity dollars is not easily available, especially in developing countries, because the definition, coverage, and methodology are not always consistent across countries. For example, countries employ different methodologies for estimating the missing values for the nonmarket service sectors and use different definitions of the informal sector.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: GDP per person employed represents labor productivity — output per unit of labor input. To compare labor productivity levels across countries, GDP is converted to international dollars using purchasing power parity rates which take account of differences in relative prices between countries.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Base Period: 2011

Periodicity: Annual