In 2017, the size of GDP for the OECD as a whole was USD 56 613 billion based on current PPPs. G7 countries accounted for almost 70% of that total. GDP per capita was on average USD 44 300 for the OECD area and USD 12 900 on average for the BRIICS, and there are also large disparities in GDP per capita across OECD countries. Within the OECD, GDP per capita was above USD 50 000 in Australia, Austria, Denmark, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and the United States and less than half the OECD average in Mexico. Similar disparities exist among the BRIICS. GDP per capita in the Russian Federation was twice the BRIICS average and almost four times higher than in India.
GDP growth remains below pre-crisis rates in most countries, particularly in Finland, Greece, Spain, the Baltic States and most Eastern European economies. GDP growth has also eased significantly in Brazil, the Russian Federation and South Africa and although growth in China remains high relative to other large economies, it too has slowed considerably compared to the pre-crisis period.