St. Vincent und die Grenadinen

  • Governor General:Susan Dougan
  • Premierminister:Ralph Gonsalves
  • Hauptstadt:Kingstown
  • Sprachen:English, French patois
  • Regierung
  • Nationales Amt für Statistik:No data
  • Bevölkerung, Personen:100.266 (2025)
  • Fläche, km2:390
  • BIP pro Kopf, US$:10.520 (2023)
  • BIP, Milliarden aktuelle US $:1,1 (2023)
  • Gini-Koeffizient:No data
  • Ease-of-Doing-Business-Rang:130

Alle Datensätze: G
  • G
    • Dezember 2024
      Quelle: SolAbility
      Hochgeladen von: Knoema
      Zugriff am: 24 Dezember, 2024
      Datensatz auswählen
      Highlights of the  Global Sustainable Competitiveness Report 2024:The GSCI is now based on a new calculation methodology incorporating 216 quantitative indicators that uses (but is not based upon) AI tools to clean data, and analyse trends and correlations • Scandinavia continues to make its mark on the Sustainable Competitiveness Index: of the top 5 spots, 4 are Scandinavian. Sweden keeps topping the Index, followed by Finland and Denmark; • Northern European countries dominate the top 20 rankings; • Only two countries in the Top 20 are not European: Japan on 10, and South on 16; • China is ranked 28, exceling in Intellectual Capital but lags in Natural Capital and Resource Efficiency, albeit with encouraging signs of efficiency improvements; • The USA is ranked 35, performing comparatively poor in resource efficiency and social capital, reflecting a decline that could potentially undermine the global status of the US in the future; • Germany ranks 9, France 8, and the UK 14; • Brazil ranks 52, India 90, and Nigeria – Africa’s most populous nation – 145; • Some of the least developed nations have a considerable higher GSCI ranking than their GDP would suggest (e.g. Vietnam, Colombia, Peu, Nepal, Bhutan, Bolivia, …) • Asian nations (South Korea, Japan, Singapore, and China) lead the Intellectual Capital Index – the basis of innovation. • The Social Capital Index ranking is headed by Northern European (Scandinavian) countries, the result of economic growth combined with a commonly accepted social consensus • Countries savaged by violent conflicts (Sudan, Yemen, Eritrea, Libya, Somalia, Afghanistan) are at the bottom of the GSCI