Household final consumption expenditure per capita (constant 2010 US$) - Country Ranking - Asia

Definition: Household final consumption expenditure per capita (private consumption per capita) is calculated using private consumption in constant 2010 prices and World Bank population estimates. Household final consumption expenditure is the market value of all goods and services, including durable products (such as cars, washing machines, and home computers), purchased by households. It excludes purchases of dwellings but includes imputed rent for owner-occupied dwellings. It also includes payments and fees to governments to obtain permits and licenses. Here, household consumption expenditure includes the expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households, even when reported separately by the country. Data are in constant 2010 U.S. dollars.

Source: World Bank national accounts data, and OECD National Accounts data files.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Hong Kong SAR, China 27,807.72 2020
2 Singapore 19,765.18 2020
3 Japan 19,748.76 2019
4 Israel 19,119.24 2020
5 United Arab Emirates 17,358.79 2019
6 Macao SAR, China 16,748.04 2020
7 Korea 14,449.09 2020
8 Qatar 14,051.54 2015
9 Kuwait 12,699.32 2018
10 Bahrain 8,699.25 2019
11 Saudi Arabia 7,864.17 2020
12 Turkey 7,123.61 2020
13 Brunei 7,020.71 2020
14 Malaysia 6,320.82 2020
15 Oman 6,266.97 2019
16 Kazakhstan 6,171.25 2019
17 Lebanon 5,844.00 2020
18 Russia 4,872.66 2020
19 China 4,112.41 2019
20 Georgia 3,728.14 2020
21 Jordan 3,533.23 2020
22 Thailand 3,370.36 2020
23 Azerbaijan 3,118.13 2015
24 Armenia 3,114.76 2020
25 Sri Lanka 2,862.04 2020
26 Mongolia 2,753.26 2020
27 Iraq 2,573.45 2019
28 Philippines 2,371.87 2020
29 Iran 2,179.64 2020
30 Indonesia 2,145.73 2020
31 Uzbekistan 1,920.00 2020
32 Bhutan 1,905.03 2019
33 Vietnam 1,800.00 2020
34 Lao PDR 1,565.15 2016
35 Pakistan 1,200.67 2020
36 Bangladesh 1,123.94 2020
37 India 1,067.68 2020
38 Cambodia 1,001.24 2020
39 Kyrgyz Republic 908.83 2020
40 Nepal 872.33 2020
41 Timor-Leste 814.45 2019
42 Tajikistan 696.96 2015
43 Myanmar 689.90 2018

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Development Relevance: An economy's growth is measured by the change in the volume of its output or in the real incomes of its residents. The 2008 United Nations System of National Accounts (2008 SNA) offers three plausible indicators for calculating growth: the volume of gross domestic product (GDP), real gross domestic income, and real gross national income. The volume of GDP is the sum of value added, measured at constant prices, by households, government, and industries operating in the economy. GDP accounts for all domestic production, regardless of whether the income accrues to domestic or foreign institutions.

Limitations and Exceptions: Because policymakers have tended to focus on fostering the growth of output, and because data on production are easier to collect than data on spending, many countries generate their primary estimate of GDP using the production approach. Moreover, many countries do not estimate all the components of national expenditures but instead derive some of the main aggregates indirectly using GDP (based on the production approach) as the control total. Household final consumption expenditure is often estimated as a residual, by subtracting all other known expenditures from GDP. The resulting aggregate may incorporate fairly large discrepancies. When household consumption is calculated separately, many of the estimates are based on household surveys, which tend to be one-year studies with limited coverage. Thus the estimates quickly become outdated and must be supplemented by estimates using price- and quantity-based statistical procedures. Complicating the issue, in many developing countries the distinction between cash outlays for personal business and those for household use may be blurred. Informal economic activities pose a particular measurement problem, especially in developing countries, where much economic activity is unrecorded. A complete picture of the economy requires estimating household outputs produced for home use, sales in informal markets, barter exchanges, and illicit or deliberately unreported activities. The consistency and completeness of such estimates depend on the skill and methods of the compiling statisticians. Measures of growth in consumption and capital formation are subject to two kinds of inaccuracy. The first stems from the difficulty of measuring expenditures at current price levels. The second arises in deflating current price data to measure volume growth, where results depend on the relevance and reliability of the price indexes and weights used. Measuring price changes is more difficult for investment goods than for consumption goods because of the one-time nature of many investments and because the rate of technological progress in capital goods makes capturing change in quality difficult. (An example is computers - prices have fallen as quality has improved.)

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Gross domestic product (GDP) from the expenditure side is made up of household final consumption expenditure, general government final consumption expenditure, gross capital formation (private and public investment in fixed assets, changes in inventories, and net acquisitions of valuables), and net exports (exports minus imports) of goods and services. Such expenditures are recorded in purchaser prices and include net taxes on products. Deflators for household consumption are usually calculated on the basis of the consumer price index.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Base Period: 2010

Periodicity: Annual