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org/wiki/World_economy
Rank
Country
World
12,167.955
100.00%
European Union
3,179.570
26.13%
United States
3,012.375
24.76%
Japan
1,349.389
11.09%
Germany
684.548
5.63%
France
494.476
4.06%
Italy
465.212
3.82%
1983 30 39 35 38 32
1984 29 39 35 38 32
1985 29 39 34 38 31
1986 29 39 33 37 29
1987 28 38 33 37 29
1988 28 38 33 37 30
1989 27 38 33 37 29
1990 27 37 32 38 28
1983 5 2 5 3 2
1984 5 2 5 3 3
1985 5 2 5 3 2
1986 4 2 4 3 2
1987 4 2 4 2 2
1988 4 2 4 2 2
1989 4 2 4 2 2
1990 4 1 3 2 2
Rank
Country
World
18,778.927
100.00%
United States
4,150.950
22.10%
European Union
3,829.220
20.39%
China
2,104.502
11.21%
India
826.837
4.40%
Germany
697.450
3.71%
United Kingdom
554.819
2.95%
22,773
25,452
At exchange rates, the economic output of 148 markets expanded by $5.3 trillion during 2010. The five largest contributors to global output expansion are China at 17%, the United States at 10%, Brazil at 9%, Japan at 8%, and India at 5%. The economic output of 35 markets contracted by $338.5 billion during 2010. The five largest contributors to global output contraction areFrance at 22%, Italy at 18%, Spain at 17%, Venezuela at 10%, and Germany at 7%. At purchasing power parity, the economic output of 169 markets expanded by $4.2 trillion during 2010. The five largest contributors to global output expansion are China at 25%, the United States at 13%, India at 10%, Japan at 5%, and Brazil at 4%. The economic output of 14 markets contracted by $17.8 billion during 2010. The five largest contributors to global output contraction are Greece at 67%, Venezuela at 19%, Romania at 5%, Haiti at 3%, and Croatia at 2%. IMF's economic outlook for 2010 noted that banks faced a "wall" of maturing debt, which presents important risks for the normalization of credit conditions. There has been little progress in lengthening the maturity of their funding and, as a result, over $4 trillion in debt is due to be refinanced in the next 2 [10] years. ` While there have been some encouraging signs of economic recovery, especially in the United States, the global economic growth seems to be losing momentum. According to the IMF's World Economic Outlook report puplished in April 2012, "global growth is projected to drop from about 4 percent in 2011 to about 3 percent in 2012 because of weak activity during the second half of 2011 and the first half of [11] 2012." The following two tables are lists of twenty largest economies by incremental GDP from 2000 to 2010 by International Monetary Fund.
Rank
Country
World
32,519.571
100.00%
China
7,113.508
21.9%
European Union
4,741.870
14.6%
United States
4,547.450
14.0%
India
2,450.303
7.5%
Russia
1,120.825
3.4%
Brazil
952.124
2.9%