per capita income
Noun: A measure of the average income earned per person in a given area (such as a country, region, or city) in a specified year. It is calculated by dividing the area's total income by its total population. This figure is a key economic indicator used to gauge the average standard of living and economic well-being of a population.
"Per capita income" is a singular noun phrase used as a statistical and economic term. It is typically used in formal, academic, or journalistic contexts to compare economic conditions between different geographic areas or to track changes over time within a single area. - It is often preceded by adjectives like high, low, average, national, or regional. - Common verbs used with it include calculate, measure, compare, rise, fall, and exceed.
- The report highlighted the disparity in per capita income between the northern and southern provinces.
- The country's per capita income has grown steadily over the past decade due to economic reforms.
- Economists use per capita income as a rough indicator of a nation's standard of living.
- A high per capita income does not necessarily mean wealth is evenly distributed among all citizens.
- Real vs. Nominal: Real per capita income is adjusted for inflation, providing a more accurate picture of changes in purchasing power over time, whereas nominal per capita income is not adjusted.
- While nominal per capita income rose, real per capita income declined due to high inflation.
- Per Capita Income Growth: Refers to the rate at which the average income per person is increasing.
- Sustained per capita income growth is a primary goal for developing economies.
- GDP per capita (Noun): A closely related but distinct measure. It divides a country's Gross Domestic Product (total economic output) by its population, whereas per capita income divides total (which can include factors like foreign investments) by population.
- Income per capita (Noun): A less common but synonymous phrase.
- Per capita (Adjective/Adverb): Meaning "for each person." It can modify other nouns (e.g., , ).
- Average income: A simpler, more general term.
- Mean income: A more technical statistical term.
While a crucial metric, "per capita income" has important limitations: 1. It is an average and can mask significant inequality within a population. A few very high incomes can raise the average, even if most people have low incomes. 2. It does not account for differences in the cost of living between areas. A high per capita income in one city may afford a lower standard of living than a lower income in a cheaper region. 3. It is a measure of income, not wealth. It reflects annual flow, not accumulated assets.
- the total national income divided by the number of people in the nation