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The developed world High income Upper-middle income Lower-middle income Low income.

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Presentation on theme: "The developed world High income Upper-middle income Lower-middle income Low income."— Presentation transcript:

1 The developed world High income Upper-middle income Lower-middle income Low income

2 Countries fall into three broad categories based on their HDI: high, medium, and low human development. The arrows show the change in HDI from 2005 values. The 2007/2008 edition of the Human Development Report was published on November 27, 2007; in Brasília, Brazil. [1]BrasíliaBrazil[1] High ██ 0.950 and over ██ 0.900–0.949 ██ 0.850–0.899 ██ 0.800–0.849 Medium ██ 0.750–0.799 ██ 0.700–0.749 ██ 0.650–0.699 ██ 0.600–0.649 ██ 0.550–0.599 ██ 0.500–0.549 Low ██ 0.450–0.499 ██ 0.400–0.449 ██ 0.350–0.399 ██ under 0.350 ██ not available

3 Image:GDP nominal per capita world map IMF 2007.PNG

4 2007 List by the International Monetary FundInternational Monetary Fund2007 List by the World Bank2007 List by the World Bank 2007 List by the CIA World Factbook2007 List by the CIA World Factbook Rank Country GDP (millions of USD) —World54,584,918 — European UnionEuropean Union 16,905,620 1 United States 13,807,550 2 Japan 4,381,576 3 Germany 3,320,913 4 China (PRC) 3,280,224 5 United Kingdom 2,804,437 6 France 2,593,779 7 Italy 2,104,666 8 Spain 1,439,983 9 Canada 1,436,086 10 Brazil 1,313,590 11 Russia 1,289,535 12 India 1,100,695 13 Mexico 1,022,816 14 South Korea 969,871 15 Australia 908,990


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