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It seems that Jiangxi has been forgotten?
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Of the 192 countries and regions that have released data so far, China ranks 71st, with a per capita income of $10,410.
Extended information: Per capita disposable income is often used to refer to per capita disposable income in real life, which is not strictly accurate. Household disposable income is the sum of residents' disposable expenditures and savings available to final consumption, i.e., the income available to residents for discretionary use.
It includes both cash and in-kind income. According to the ** of income, disposable income includes four items, namely: wage income, net operating income, net property income and net transfer income.
In 2019, the per capita disposable income of residents in the country was 30,733 yuan, an increase over the previous year, and the actual growth was deducted from the ** factor.
In 2020, the per capita disposable income of residents in the country will be 32,189 yuan, a nominal increase over 2019, and the actual growth after deducting the first factor, which is basically in sync with economic growth.
In the first half of 2021, the per capita disposable income of residents nationwide was 17,642 yuan, a nominal increase over 2020.
On January 17, 2022, the National Bureau of Statistics released China's economic data for 2021. The per capita disposable income of residents in the country was 35,128 yuan, a nominal increase over the previous year and an average nominal growth in two years. After deducting the actual growth of ** factors, the two-year average growth is basically in sync with economic growth.
Disposable income is considered to be the most important determinant of consumer spending, and is therefore often used to measure changes in a country's standard of living.
Household disposable income can be roughly understood as the average gross disposable income of the household sector. Since it excludes the non-financial enterprise sector, the financial institution sector and the ** sector, the total disposable income of residents is much smaller than the total national disposable income. The per capita disposable income (the total disposable income of the household sector divided by the permanent population) is much smaller than the total per capita disposable income (the total disposable income divided by the permanent population).
On January 20, 2016, the National Bureau of Statistics announced that the per capita disposable income of residents in 2015 was 21,966 yuan, a nominal increase over the previous year, and the actual growth after deducting the first factor. The GDP growth rate over the same period is stupid.
On February 26, 2015, the National Bureau of Statistics released the national per capita disposable income data for the first time: the per capita disposable income of residents in 2014 was 20,167 yuan.
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In the end, there are three streams of GDP: **, enterprises and residents, which receive taxes, profits, and labor remuneration respectively. Therefore, generally speaking, the higher the per capita GDP of Bidong, the higher the per capita income.
According to the data of financial blog Beihaiju, the disposable income of US residents accounted for 76% of GDP in 2016, and that of China was 66%. Although the proportion of household income in GDP varies from country to country, per capita GDP can generally reflect the income level of a country's residents.
In 2017, the per capita GDP of mainland China was 8,836 US dollars, ranking about 70th in the world. This level, not to mention compared to the developed economies of the OECD, has not even reached the global average. In 2017, the global per capita GDP was about 10,000 US dollars, which is twice that of China.
Although China's GDP has ranked second in the world, the world's second place is built up by population. Among the top ten economies in the world, China's per capita GDP is the second from the bottom, only higher than India. However, China's industrialization process is one or two hundred years slower than that of Western developed countries, resulting in China's income level completely incomparable with Western countries.
However, compared with those countries in the process of industrialization in the world, China's level as a whole is above the middle level.
China, India, Brazil, Russia, Indonesia, Mexico, Turkey, Thailand, etc., are all countries in the process of industrialization. Most of these countries have a GDP per capita of between $3,000 and $10,000. This income band is known as the middle income.
In the field of economics, there is a term called "middle-income trap", which refers to the fact that many industrialized countries have been hovering in the middle-income range for a long time and do not meet the criteria for high-income countries (the current standard is more than 10,000 dollars).
China's current level is in the middle-income ranks, and it needs to grow by 50% from the high-income standard of 10,000 US dollars. Therefore, the decade before 2030 is a critical period for China to leapfrog the middle-income trap. Whether it can enter the ranks of high-income countries depends on the development in the next ten years.
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In the first three quarters of 2022, the per capita disposable income of residents nationwide increased nominally over the same period of the previous year, and the real growth was deducted from the ** factor. The industry pointed out that it is necessary to increase the income of urban and rural residents through multiple channels, especially to improve the consumption power of low- and middle-income residents who have a high propensity to consume but are greatly affected by the epidemic. Appropriately increase consumer credit.
From the perspective of Hubei Province, in the first three quarters of 2022, the per capita disposable income of all residents in Hubei Province was 23,847 yuan, an increase over the same period of the previous year, and the growth rate ranked third in the country, and the growth rate was higher than the economic growth level in the same period.
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This is the World Bank.
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