PPP conversion factor, private consumption (LCU per international $) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Purchasing power parity conversion factor is the number of units of a country's currency required to buy the same amounts of goods and services in the domestic market as U.S. dollar would buy in the United States. This conversion factor is for private consumption (i.e., household final consumption expenditure). For most economies PPP figures are extrapolated from the 2011 International Comparison Program (ICP) benchmark estimates or imputed using a statistical model based on the 2011 ICP. For 47 high- and upper middle-income economies conversion factors are provided by Eurostat and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

Source: World Bank, International Comparison Program database.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Somalia 7,861.36 2017
2 Guinea 4,353.05 2021
3 Sierra Leone 3,255.26 2021
4 Uganda 1,267.21 2020
5 Madagascar 1,089.91 2020
6 Tanzania 790.48 2020
7 Burundi 664.75 2021
8 Dem. Rep. Congo 630.61 2017
9 Gabon 328.25 2020
10 Central African Republic 310.18 2020
11 Equatorial Guinea 309.80 2020
12 Malawi 306.03 2020
13 Rwanda 299.51 2021
14 Congo 285.10 2020
15 Chad 242.80 2020
16 Togo 241.67 2020
17 Niger 237.91 2021
18 Senegal 236.87 2020
19 Côte d'Ivoire 236.56 2021
20 Cameroon 232.50 2021
21 Guinea-Bissau 224.03 2019
22 Benin 214.01 2020
23 Comoros 213.52 2017
24 Mali 191.18 2021
25 Burkina Faso 188.26 2021
26 Angola 144.05 2019
27 Nigeria 134.21 2019
28 Djibouti 104.46 2020
29 Cabo Verde 46.45 2020
30 Kenya 46.41 2021
31 Algeria 40.35 2021
32 Sudan 31.43 2020
33 Mozambique 22.94 2020
34 Mauritius 18.02 2021
35 The Gambia 17.74 2021
36 Mauritania 12.72 2020
37 São Tomé and Principe 11.33 2018
38 Ethiopia 10.74 2019
39 Seychelles 9.80 2020
40 Eritrea 7.59 2017
41 Namibia 7.15 2021
42 South Africa 6.96 2021
43 Eswatini 6.31 2019
44 Lesotho 5.82 2021
45 Zambia 5.43 2020
46 Botswana 5.25 2021
47 Egypt 4.23 2020
48 Morocco 4.05 2021
49 Ghana 2.21 2021
50 Zimbabwe 1.07 2018
51 Tunisia 0.86 2021
52 Libya 0.64 2017
53 Liberia 0.51 2018

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Development Relevance: In a market-based economy, household, producer, and government choices about resource allocation are influenced by relative prices, including the real exchange rate, real wages, real interest rates, and other prices in the economy. Relative prices also largely reflect these agents' choices. Thus relative prices convey vital information about the interaction of economic agents in an economy and with the rest of the world.

Limitations and Exceptions: Official or market exchange rates are often used to convert economic statistics in local currencies to a common currency in order to make comparisons across countries. Since market rates reflect at best the relative prices of tradable goods, the volume of goods and services that a U.S. dollar buys in the United States may not correspond to what a U.S. dollar converted to another country's currency at the official exchange rate would buy in that country, particularly when nontradable goods and services account for a significant share of a country's output. An alternative exchange rate - the purchasing power parity (PPP) conversion factor - is preferred because it reflects differences in price levels for both tradable and nontradable goods and services and therefore provides a more meaningful comparison of real output.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: PPP rates provide a standard measure allowing comparison of real levels of expenditure between countries, just as conventional price indexes allow comparison of real values over time. PPP rates are calculated by simultaneously comparing the prices of similar goods and services among a large number of countries. In the most recent round of price surveys conducted by the International Comparison Program (ICP) in 2011, 199 economies participated. The PPP conversion factors come from three sources. For 47 high- and upper middle-income countries conversion factors are provided by Eurostat and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). For the remaining 2011 ICP countries the PPP estimates are extrapolated from the 2011 ICP benchmark results, which account for relative price changes between each economy and the United States. Extrapolation for private consumption uses the consumer price index. For countries that did not participate in the 2011 ICP round, the PPP estimates are imputed using a statistical model. More information on the results of the 2011 ICP is available at www.worldbank.org/data/icp.

Periodicity: Annual