2026-01-03 23:09:07

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
Which jobs are adding the most openings over the next decade?
This visualization from USAFacts uses data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) to forecast the fastest-growing jobs in the U.S. over the next decade.
As the U.S. population continues to age, home health and personal care aides are the fastest-growing profession by far.
In the span of a decade, there will be a whopping 739,800 new positions in this field added nationwide. However, it’s worth mentioning that these jobs have one of the lowest median salaries on the list at under $35,000 per year.
| Rank | Occupation | Projected New Jobs | Median Annual Pay (2024) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Home health and personal care aides | 739.8K | $34.9K |
| 2 | Software developers | 267.7K | $133.1K |
| 3 | Stockers and order fillers | 235.0K | $37.1K |
| 4 | Fast food and counter workers | 233.2K | $30.5K |
| 5 | Cooks, restaurant | 217.0K | $36.8K |
| 6 | Registered nurses | 166.1K | $93.6K |
| 7 | General and operations managers | 164.0K | $103.0K |
| 8 | Medical and health services managers | 142.9K | $118.0K |
| 9 | Financial managers | 128.8K | $161.7K |
| 10 | Nurse practitioners | 128.4K | $129.2K |
| 11 | Construction laborers | 106.5K | $46.7K |
| 12 | Computer and information systems managers | 101.6K | $171.2K |
| 13 | Medical assistants | 101.2K | $44.2K |
| 14 | Management analysts | 94.5K | $101.2K |
| 15 | Heavy and tractor-trailer truck drivers | 89.3K | $57.4K |
| 16 | Data scientists | 82.5K | $112.6K |
| 17 | Substance abuse, behavioral disorder, and mental health counselors | 81.0K | $59.2K |
| 18 | Light truck drivers | 78.9K | $44.1K |
| 19 | Electricians | 77.4K | $62.4K |
| 20 | First-line supervisors of food preparation and serving workers | 73.0K | $42.0K |
Tech careers, such as software developers and computer and information systems managers, also feature strongly in the mix, though it’s arguable that AI could impact some of these fields tremendously. Big tech companies famously slowed the hiring of developers in 2025.
Finally, it’s worth noting that there are some well-paying careers that make the list.
In terms of jobs with median earnings well over $100,000 per year, there are a few roles that hit the spot: data scientists ($112.6K), software developers ($133.1K), computer and information systems managers ($171.2K), financial managers ($161.7K), and nurse practitioners ($129.2K) are just a few that stand out.
Which jobs are the safest from AI? See this infographic on Voronoi to see where the most job security lies.
2026-01-03 21:06:55
See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
The Great Lakes are one of North America’s most defining natural features. Together, they hold roughly 20% of the world’s surface fresh water and stretch across more than 94,000 square miles. While they are often discussed as a single system, each lake has a very different underwater landscape.
This visualization maps the maximum depth of each Great Lake, highlighting dramatic contrasts shaped by glaciers, geology, and time.
The data for this visualization comes from WorldAtlas, supported by bathymetric data from NOAA and geographic data from Natural Earth.
Lake Superior is the undisputed heavyweight when it comes to depth. At 1,333 feet (406 meters), it is not only the deepest of the Great Lakes, but also the deepest freshwater lake in the United States. Its immense volume means it contains more water than the other four Great Lakes combined.
| Lake | Max Depth (feet) | Max Depth (meters) | U.S. States Bordered |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lake Superior | 1,333 | 406 | Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan |
| Lake Michigan | 923 | 281 | Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana |
| Lake Ontario | 802 | 244 | New York |
| Lake Huron | 751 | 229 | Michigan |
| Lake Erie | 210 | 64 | Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York |
Why is depth important? Depth plays a critical role in water temperature, circulation, ecosystems, and even shipping routes. Deeper lakes tend to warm more slowly, mix differently, and support distinct aquatic life compared to shallower ones.
Lake Superior’s depth contributes to colder average temperatures and powerful storms, making the lake both ecologically unique and notoriously dangerous for shipping. Its deep basins were carved by glaciers over thousands of years, leaving behind steep underwater cliffs and trenches.
Lake Michigan ranks second in depth at 923 feet (281 meters). Unlike the others, it is the only Great Lake located entirely within the United States. Its depth supports major commercial shipping lanes and a diverse aquatic ecosystem.
Lake Ontario follows closely with a maximum depth of 802 feet (244 meters), despite being the smallest by surface area. Lake Huron, at 751 feet (229 meters), appears shallower by comparison but still contains enormous volumes of water due to its sprawling size.
Lake Erie stands apart as the shallowest Great Lake, reaching just 210 feet (64 meters) at its deepest point. Its shallow depth allows it to warm quickly in summer and freeze more easily in winter.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out The World’s Forests on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-01-03 02:28:21
See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
The age structure of the U.S. population is undergoing a major transition, as younger generations are becoming more prominent.
This visualization breaks down the U.S. population by generation in 2025, using data from the U.S. Census Bureau, as of 2025.
Millennials, born between 1981 and 1996, are the largest generation in the U.S., with roughly 74 million people. They account for 22% of the total population and are now firmly in their prime working and family-forming years. Close behind is Generation Z, with over 71 million people, representing 21% of Americans.
| Generation | Birth Years | Age Range (2025) | Population | Share of population |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silent Generation | 1928–1945 | 80–97 | 13,741,630 | 4% |
| Baby Boomers | 1946–1964 | 61–79 | 64,448,248 | 19% |
| Generation X | 1965–1980 | 45–60 | 65,432,121 | 19% |
| Millennials | 1981–1996 | 29–44 | 74,104,186 | 22% |
| Generation Z | 1997–2012 | 13–28 | 71,146,116 | 21% |
| Generation Alpha | 2013–2025 | 0–12 | 51,238,687 | 15% |
| Total Population | - | - | 340,110,988 | 100% |
Baby Boomers remain a major demographic force, totaling about 64 million people, or 19% of the population. Now aged 61 to 79, this group continues to impact healthcare demand, retirement systems, and wealth distribution. Generation X is nearly the same size, with 65 million people and an equal 19% share.
Meanwhile, generation Alpha, born from 2013 onward, already numbers more than 51 million people. Although they represent 15% of the population, their impact is still emerging. This cohort will shape future education systems, technology adoption, and long-term workforce trends.
At the opposite end of the spectrum, the Silent Generation now makes up just 4% of Americans.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Why U.S. Homes Feel Pricier: House Prices vs. Income (1985–2025) on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
2026-01-02 23:41:06
See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
It’s impossible to describe an entire year with just a single word, but the various major dictionaries try each year.
While it can’t capture all of the complexity a year had in store, the right word can be emblematic of a year’s social phenomena, newly established terminology, and shared cultural experiences over those 365 days.
This graphic visualizes the words of the year of five major dictionaries from 2020 to 2025, with the dictionaries’ sites (Dictionary.com, Merriam-Webster, Collins, Oxford, and Cambridge) being the source of the data.
Dictionary.com, Collins, Merriam-Webster, Oxford, and Cambridge all treat their ‘Word of the Year’ as an editorial choice that is guided heavily by evidence of real-world usage and public interest.
Dictionary.com weighs cultural impact alongside signals like news and social trends, while Collins draws on its Collins Corpus of spoken and written English to spot words that rose to prominence.
Merriam-Webster and Cambridge lean strongly on lookup and search spikes on their sites, then apply editorial judgment (Cambridge also filters for zeitgeist and what’s linguistically notable).
Oxford combines corpus-based language research with editor curation and, in some years, public voting, before its team makes the final call.
In short: editors make the final pick, primarily using data from searches, written and spoken language, along with cultural trends.
With the words of the year of various dictionaries laid out clearly, it’s fascinating to see the trends that were felt most each year.
The table below shows the word of the year of major dictionaries from 2020 to 2025:
| 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dictionary.com | pandemic | allyship | woman | hallucinate | demure | 6-7 |
| Merriam-Webster | pandemic | vaccine | gaslighting | authentic | polarization | slop |
| Collins | lockdown | NFT | permacrisis | AI | Brat | vibe coding |
| Oxford | no word chosen | vax | goblin mode | rizz | brain rot | rage bait |
| Cambridge | quarantine | perseverance | homer | hallucinate | manifest | parasocial |
We can see how 2020 was defined by the pandemic, with pandemic, quarantine, and lockdown all chosen that year (while Oxford University Press didn’t choose a word that year).
While 2021’s words feature vaccine, vax, and perseverance, non-pandemic words and trends like NFT and allyship were part of the mix.
2023 brought AI-related words like hallucinate and AI into the mix, as it was ChatGPT’s first full year after launching in November of 2022.
In 2025, we’ve seen evolutions of more specific AI-related jargon like slop (sloppy or low-quality AI-made digital content) and vibe coding, which defines AI-driven software development through prompts rather than writing out the code oneself.
2025’s other words of the year like parasocial and rage bait define growing cultural trends and behaviors of an increasingly online world, while 6-7 remains a largely incomprehensible meme—ubiquitous among younger generations despite having no clear or widely agreed-upon meaning.
If you liked this visualization, check out this graphic on Voronoi that breaks down the world’s most-spoken languages.
2026-01-02 21:02:05
See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
With 17.7 million residents, Mexico’s capital is bigger than New York City and Chicago combined.
Over the next decade, Mexico City is forecasted to add another 175,000 to its population. The Big Apple, in contrast, is set to shrink by about 189,000 residents.
This graphic shows the biggest North American cities by population, based on data from the United Nations World Urbanization Prospects 2025.
Urban populations can be measured in different ways. In this methodology, the UN looks at satellite-mapped urban footprints for consistency. For this reason some city populations may not line up exactly as you may expect.Below, we show the 30 most populous cities in North America in 2025:
| Rank | City | Country | 2025 Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mexico City |
Mexico |
17,734,000 |
| 2 | New York City |
U.S. |
13,920,000 |
| 3 | Los Angeles |
U.S. |
12,740,000 |
| 4 | Toronto |
Canada |
5,494,000 |
| 5 | Santo Domingo |
Dominican Republic |
4,600,000 |
| 6 | Guadalajara |
Mexico |
4,135,000 |
| 7 | Houston |
U.S. |
3,955,000 |
| 8 | Monterrey |
Mexico |
3,938,000 |
| 9 | Chicago |
U.S. |
3,683,000 |
| 10 | Washington, D.C. |
U.S. |
3,270,000 |
| 11 | San Francisco |
U.S. |
3,163,000 |
| 12 | Miami |
U.S. |
2,912,000 |
| 13 | Guatemala City |
Guatemala |
2,838,000 |
| 14 | Montreal |
Canada |
2,669,000 |
| 15 | Denver |
U.S. |
2,266,000 |
| 16 | Philadelphia |
U.S. |
2,232,000 |
| 17 | Las Vegas |
U.S. |
2,184,000 |
| 18 | San José |
Costa Rica |
2,171,000 |
| 19 | Phoenix |
U.S. |
1,972,000 |
| 20 | Puebla |
Mexico |
1,948,000 |
| 21 | San Diego |
U.S. |
1,915,000 |
| 22 | Port-au-Prince |
Haiti |
1,868,000 |
| 23 | Vancouver |
Canada |
1,708,000 |
| 24 | San Antonio |
U.S. |
1,686,000 |
| 25 | Boston |
U.S. |
1,640,000 |
| 26 | San Salvador |
El Salvador |
1,615,000 |
| 27 | Tegucigalpa |
Honduras |
1,607,000 |
| 28 | Havana |
Cuba |
1,594,000 |
| 29 | Tijuana |
Mexico |
1,558,000 |
| 30 | Panama City |
Panama |
1,527,000 |
With the largest population by far, the Mexico City region drives almost 25% of Mexico’s GDP.
Trade and transportation is the capital’s most prominent sector, bolstered by shifting supply chains and nearshoring. After Mexico City, Guadalajara, known as the “Silicon Valley of Mexico” is the country’s second-most populous city, at 4.1 million.
Meanwhile, New York City sits at a population of 13.9 million in 2025. Since 2020, the financial hub has lost about 128,000 residents, with many moving to Florida, Texas, and California. In contrast, Los Angeles has grown by nearly 250,000 over the same period to reach 12.7 million.
Ranking fourth is Toronto, Canada’s leading financial center. Like Los Angeles, it has added roughly 250,000 residents since 2020, making it one of the country’s fastest-growing major cities. Looking ahead, Toronto is projected to grow by another 370,000 people over the next decade, largely driven by international migration.
To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the two largest cities on every continent.
2026-01-02 01:36:52
See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
Natural resources remain a powerful driver of economic output for many countries. From oil and gas to minerals and forests, these assets can generate enormous income, but they also create vulnerability. This visualization maps natural resource income as a share of GDP, highlighting which economies are most dependent on extracting and selling raw materials.
The data for this visualization comes from the World Bank Group. It measures natural resource rents as a share of GDP in 2021, defined as the economic surplus generated from oil, gas, coal, minerals, and forests after accounting for extraction costs.
A small group of countries sits at the extreme end of resource dependence. Libya tops the list, with natural resource rents accounting for 61% of its GDP, reflecting its heavy reliance on oil exports. Iraq, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Republic of Congo also derive more than one-third of their economic output from natural resources.
In these economies, government revenues, employment, and foreign exchange earnings are closely tied to global commodity prices.
| Rank | Country | Natural Resources Income (% of GDP) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Libya |
61.03% |
| 2 |
Iraq |
43.45% |
| 3 |
Democratic Republic of the Congo |
38.83% |
| 4 |
Republic of Congo |
37.71% |
| 5 |
Zambia |
35.26% |
| 6 |
Timor-Leste |
34.73% |
| 7 |
Guyana |
33.68% |
| 8 |
Mongolia |
33.14% |
| 9 |
Iran, Islamic Rep. |
30.45% |
| 10 |
Angola |
29.97% |
| 11 |
Azerbaijan |
29.94% |
| 12 |
Oman |
29.21% |
| 13 |
Papua New Guinea |
27.39% |
| 14 |
Qatar |
27.29% |
| 15 |
Kazakhstan |
26.84% |
| 16 |
Saudi Arabia |
25.57% |
| 17 |
Brunei Darussalam |
24.28% |
| 18 |
Equatorial Guinea |
23.50% |
| 19 |
Algeria |
22.59% |
| 20 |
Liberia |
21.92% |
| 21 |
Chad |
21.34% |
| 22 |
Uzbekistan |
20.47% |
| 23 |
Burkina Faso |
20.14% |
| 24 |
Russia |
18.51% |
| 25 |
Gabon |
18.49% |
| 26 |
Mali |
18.42% |
| 27 |
Solomon Islands |
18.40% |
| 28 |
Cabo Verde |
17.66% |
| 29 |
United Arab Emirates |
17.63% |
| 30 |
Chile |
16.90% |
| 31 |
New Caledonia |
16.79% |
| 32 |
Bahrain |
16.64% |
| 33 |
Mozambique |
14.91% |
| 34 |
Burundi |
13.96% |
| 35 |
Australia |
13.36% |
| 36 |
Ghana |
13.35% |
| 37 |
Sudan |
12.75% |
| 38 |
Peru |
12.72% |
| 39 |
Kyrgyz Republic |
11.51% |
| 40 |
Mauritania |
11.45% |
| 41 |
Somalia |
11.24% |
| 42 |
Guinea-Bissau |
10.43% |
| 43 |
Central African Republic |
10.26% |
| 44 |
Norway |
10.05% |
| 45 |
Suriname |
9.59% |
| 46 |
Bolivia |
9.47% |
| 47 |
Tajikistan |
9.05% |
| 48 |
Sierra Leone |
9.04% |
| 49 |
Myanmar |
8.68% |
| 50 |
Nigeria |
8.55% |
| 51 |
Brazil |
7.94% |
| 52 |
Togo |
7.86% |
| 53 |
Trinidad and Tobago |
7.86% |
| 54 |
Ukraine |
7.51% |
| 55 |
Uganda |
7.48% |
| 56 |
South Africa |
7.33% |
| 57 |
Armenia |
7.05% |
| 58 |
Malaysia |
6.92% |
| 59 |
Ecuador |
6.70% |
| 60 |
Tanzania |
6.69% |
| 61 |
Niger |
6.41% |
| 62 |
Zimbabwe |
6.40% |
| 63 |
Ethiopia |
5.87% |
| 64 |
Madagascar |
5.53% |
| 65 |
Cameroon |
5.53% |
| 66 |
Lao PDR |
5.38% |
| 67 |
Colombia |
5.32% |
| 68 |
Indonesia |
5.16% |
| 69 |
Egypt |
5.14% |
| 70 |
Canada |
4.95% |
| 71 |
Cote d'Ivoire |
4.74% |
| 72 |
Guinea |
4.52% |
| 73 |
Senegal |
4.40% |
| 74 |
Lesotho |
4.32% |
| 75 |
Malawi |
4.22% |
| 76 |
Namibia |
4.03% |
| 77 |
Rwanda |
4.02% |
| 78 |
Nicaragua |
3.84% |
| 79 |
Panama |
3.66% |
| 80 |
Mexico |
3.64% |
| 81 |
India |
3.16% |
| 82 |
Eswatini |
3.00% |
| 83 |
Gambia, The |
2.86% |
| 84 |
Bhutan |
2.73% |
| 85 |
Argentina |
2.65% |
| 86 |
Viet Nam |
2.55% |
| 87 |
Benin |
2.30% |
| 88 |
Fiji |
2.25% |
| 89 |
Tunisia |
2.25% |
| 90 |
Dominican Republic |
2.08% |
| 91 |
Philippines |
1.97% |
| 92 |
Guatemala |
1.93% |
| 93 |
Uruguay |
1.93% |
| 94 |
Sao Tome and Principe |
1.88% |
| 95 |
Belarus |
1.86% |
| 96 |
Thailand |
1.82% |
| 97 |
Serbia |
1.75% |
| 98 |
Estonia |
1.72% |
| 99 |
China |
1.71% |
| 100 |
Comoros |
1.63% |
| 101 |
New Zealand |
1.49% |
| 102 |
Albania |
1.44% |
| 103 |
Pakistan |
1.44% |
| 104 |
Georgia |
1.39% |
| 105 |
Paraguay |
1.35% |
| 106 |
United States |
1.28% |
| 107 |
Kenya |
1.23% |
| 108 |
Honduras |
1.22% |
| 109 |
Sweden |
1.21% |
| 110 |
Latvia |
1.17% |
| 111 |
Romania |
1.14% |
| 112 |
Botswana |
1.04% |
| 113 |
Poland |
1.03% |
| 114 |
Kosovo |
0.93% |
| 115 |
Bulgaria |
0.92% |
| 116 |
Cambodia |
0.84% |
| 117 |
Turkiye |
0.83% |
| 118 |
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
0.81% |
| 119 |
Costa Rica |
0.76% |
| 120 |
Croatia |
0.68% |
| 121 |
Montenegro |
0.64% |
| 122 |
Bangladesh |
0.61% |
| 123 |
United Kingdom |
0.59% |
| 124 |
Vanuatu |
0.57% |
| 125 |
El Salvador |
0.54% |
| 126 |
Belize |
0.52% |
| 127 |
Nepal |
0.50% |
| 128 |
Jamaica |
0.46% |
| 129 |
Finland |
0.45% |
| 130 |
Israel |
0.44% |
| 131 |
Afghanistan |
0.43% |
| 132 |
Hungary |
0.40% |
| 133 |
Czechia |
0.39% |
| 134 |
Morocco |
0.39% |
| 135 |
Netherlands |
0.34% |
| 136 |
Denmark |
0.34% |
| 137 |
Barbados |
0.33% |
| 138 |
Haiti |
0.33% |
| 139 |
Portugal |
0.29% |
| 140 |
Lithuania |
0.29% |
| 141 |
Samoa |
0.28% |
| 142 |
Djibouti |
0.28% |
| 143 |
Moldova |
0.24% |
| 144 |
Slovak Republic |
0.23% |
| 145 |
Slovenia |
0.19% |
| 146 |
North Macedonia |
0.14% |
| 147 |
Seychelles |
0.12% |
| 148 |
Austria |
0.12% |
| 149 |
Spain |
0.12% |
| 150 |
Italy |
0.11% |
| 151 |
Ireland |
0.10% |
| 152 |
Greece |
0.09% |
| 153 |
Sri Lanka |
0.08% |
| 154 |
Jordan |
0.08% |
| 155 |
Germany |
0.08% |
| 156 |
Korea, Rep. |
0.05% |
| 157 |
Japan |
0.05% |
| 158 |
Belgium |
0.04% |
| 159 |
Kiribati |
0.04% |
| 160 |
Tonga |
0.04% |
| 161 |
Dominica |
0.03% |
| 162 |
France |
0.03% |
| 163 |
St. Vincent and the Grenadines |
0.02% |
| 164 |
Micronesia, Fed. Sts. |
0.02% |
| 165 |
The Bahamas |
0.01% |
| 166 |
St. Lucia |
0.01% |
| 167 |
Cyprus |
0.01% |
| 168 |
Switzerland |
0.01% |
| 169 |
Luxembourg |
0.00% |
| 170 |
Maldives |
0.00% |
| 171 |
French Polynesia |
0.00% |
| 172 |
Turks and Caicos Islands |
0.00% |
| 173 |
Lebanon |
0.00% |
| 174 |
Mauritius |
0.00% |
| 175 |
Aruba |
0.00% |
| 176 |
Hong Kong |
0.00% |
| 177 |
Macao |
0.00% |
| 178 |
Singapore |
0.00% |
| 179 |
Iceland |
0.00% |
| 180 |
Andorra |
0.00% |
| 181 |
Antigua and Barbuda |
0.00% |
| 182 |
American Samoa |
0.00% |
| 183 |
Bermuda |
0.00% |
| 184 |
Cuba |
0.00% |
| 185 |
Curacao |
0.00% |
| 186 |
Eritrea |
0.00% |
| 187 |
Faroe Islands |
0.00% |
| 188 |
Grenada |
0.00% |
| 189 |
Gibraltar |
0.00% |
| 190 |
Greenland |
0.00% |
| 191 |
Guam |
0.00% |
| 192 |
Isle of Man |
0.00% |
| 193 | Channel Islands | 0.00% |
| 194 |
St. Kitts and Nevis |
0.00% |
| 195 |
North Korea |
0.00% |
| 196 |
Kuwait |
0.00% |
| 197 |
Cayman Islands |
0.00% |
| 198 |
Liechtenstein |
0.00% |
| 199 |
Monaco |
0.00% |
| 200 |
St. Martin (French part) |
0.00% |
| 201 |
Marshall Islands |
0.00% |
| 202 |
Northern Mariana Islands |
0.00% |
| 203 |
Malta |
0.00% |
| 204 |
Nauru |
0.00% |
| 205 |
Puerto Rico (U.S.) |
0.00% |
| 206 |
West Bank and Gaza |
0.00% |
| 207 |
Palau |
0.00% |
| 208 |
San Marino |
0.00% |
| 209 |
South Sudan |
0.00% |
| 210 |
Sint Maarten (Dutch part) |
0.00% |
| 211 |
Syrian Arab Republic |
0.00% |
| 212 |
Turkmenistan |
0.00% |
| 213 |
Tuvalu |
0.00% |
| 214 |
Venezuela, RB |
0.00% |
| 215 |
British Virgin Islands |
0.00% |
| 216 |
Virgin Islands (U.S.) |
0.00% |
| 217 |
Yemen, Rep. |
0.00% |
Many of the most resource-dependent countries are concentrated in the Middle East and Africa. Oil- and gas-rich nations such as Iran, Angola, Oman, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia feature prominently.
In sub-Saharan Africa, mineral exporters like Zambia and Mongolia, along with oil producers such as Equatorial Guinea and Chad, rely heavily on resource rents.
In contrast, most advanced economies generate only a small share of GDP from natural resources. Countries such as the United States, Germany, Japan, France, and the United Kingdom all register resource rents near or below 1% of GDP.
Even resource-rich developed nations like Norway and Australia show relatively moderate dependence, reflecting diversified economies with strong manufacturing and services sectors.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Global GDP Growth Projections in 2025 on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.