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Visualizing 75 Years of U.S. Energy Production

2026-07-15 01:17:41

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A stacked area chart and line chart showing U.S. primary energy production by source — natural gas, crude oil, coal, nuclear, hydroelectric, solar and wind, biofuels, and wood — in quadrillion BTU and as a percentage share of the total, from 1950 to 2025.

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Visualizing 75 Years of U.S. Energy Production

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.

Key Takeaways

  • Coal and natural gas have swapped places since 1950. Coal fell from 41% of U.S. energy production to 10%, while natural gas rose from 20% to 47%.
  • Crude oil ranked second in both 1950 and 2025, despite falling from nearly 40% of production in the early 1970s to just 15% in 2008.
  • Total U.S. primary energy production more than tripled over the period, rising from 34.5 to 107.1 quadrillion BTU.

Over the last 75 years, the sources powering U.S. energy production have changed significantly, shaped by new technologies, shifting economics, and major global events.

This visualization tracks the production share and total output of major U.S. energy sources from 1950 to 2025.

Energy production is measured in quadrillion British thermal units (quads). The figures come from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

75 Years of U.S. Energy Production (1950–2025)

U.S. primary energy production climbed from 34.5 quadrillion BTU in 1950 to 107.1 quadrillion BTU in 2025.

Natural gas accounted for much of that growth, rising from 7.0 to 50.5 quads, an increase of more than sevenfold. Most of the gain came after 2008, when shale drilling ended a four-decade stretch of largely stagnant output.

The data table below shows U.S. energy production by source from 1950 to 2025, measured in quads:

Energy Source 1950 (Quads) 2025 (Quads) % Change (1950–2025)
Coal 14.1 11.0 -22.0%
Natural Gas 7.0 50.5 621.4%
Crude Oil 11.4 28.2 147.4%
Nuclear 0.0 8.2 n/a
Hydroelectric and Geothermal 0.3 1.0 233.3%
Solar and Wind 0.0 3.0 n/a
Wood and Waste 1.6 2.4 50.0%
Biofuels and Waste 0.0 2.8 n/a
Total U.S. Primary Energy Production 34.5 107.1 210.4%

Coal moved in the opposite direction. Production rose from 14.1 quads in 1950 to a peak of 24.0 quads in 1998, before falling sharply after 2009 as utilities increasingly switched to lower-cost natural gas. By 2025, coal production had declined to 11.0 quads.

Crude oil followed a longer and more volatile path. Production nearly doubled from 11.4 quads in 1950 to 20.4 quads in 1970, then declined for more than three decades to a low of 10.6 quads in 2008.

The same shale techniques that revived natural gas production also pushed crude oil output to a record 28.2 quads in 2025, helping make the U.S. the world’s largest oil producer.

Coal and Natural Gas Have Swapped Places

In 1950, coal was the largest source of U.S. primary energy production, followed by crude oil and natural gas. By 2025, natural gas had moved into first place, crude oil remained second, and coal had fallen to third.

The data table below shows each major energy source’s share of U.S. production in 1950 and 2025:

Energy Source 1950
(Share of Energy Mix)
2025
(Share of Energy Mix)
Percentage Point
Change (1950–2025)
Coal 40.9% 10.3% -30.6
Natural Gas 20.3% 47.2% +26.9
Crude Oil 33.0% 26.3% -6.7
Nuclear 0.0% 7.7% +7.7
Hydroelectric and Geothermal 0.9% 0.9% +0.1
Solar and Wind 0.0% 2.8% +2.8
Wood and Waste 4.6% 2.2% -2.4
Biofuels and Waste 0.0% 2.6% +2.6

Crude oil is the one major fuel that ended close to where it began. It supplied 33% of U.S. production in 1950 and 26% in 2025, ranking second in both years. In between, its share rose to nearly 40% in the early 1970s before falling to just 15% by 2008 amid a multidecade production decline.

The shale-driven rebound in oil and natural gas has helped keep the U.S. among a small group of major economies that produce more energy than they consume, alongside countries such as Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Canada.

Renewable sources have also expanded from a relatively small base. Solar, wind, hydroelectric, and biofuels collectively increased their share of U.S. production from 3.4% in 2006 to 6.7% in 2025. Even so, the country’s production mix remains dominated by the same three fossil fuels as in 1950, only in a different order.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Mapped: The World’s Biggest Energy Sources by Country on Voronoi.

Silver vs. Gold: Annual Returns During Downturns

2026-07-14 23:41:00

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The following content is sponsored by Global X Canada

Silver vs. Gold: Annual Returns During Downturns

Key Takeaways

  • Silver had an annual return of 148% versus gold’s 65% in 2025, showing how much more volatile silver can be during periods of market stress.
  • During the 2008 downturn, gold rose 3.4% while silver fell 26.9%, but silver rebounded by 57.5% in 2009 and 80.3% in 2010 as conditions improved.

Silver has historically experienced greater volatility than gold during recessions and market downturns. In 2008, for example, gold rose 3.4% while silver fell 26.9%, before silver rebounded 57.5% in 2009 and 80.3% in 2010.

Gold and silver are both precious metals, but the data shows they can behave very differently under stress. Gold tends to act as the steadier metal, while silver reacts more sharply as investor sentiment and industrial demand shift.

This graphic, in partnership with Global X Canada, is the second of three graphics in the Investing in Silver series. It compares annual gold and silver returns during recession and downturn periods using data from the World Bank and Macrotrends.

Mexico Leads with the Most Silver Production

Silver has historically shown larger moves than gold in both directions. In 2025, silver surged nearly 150%, more than doubling gold’s 65% gain.

Year Gold Returns (%) Silver Returns (%)
2000 -6.26 -14.07
2001 1.41 -1.31
2002 23.96 3.32
2003 21.74 27.84
2004 4.97 14.24
2005 17.12 29.47
2006 23.92 46.09
2007 31.59 14.42
2008 3.41 -26.9
2009 27.63 57.46
2010 27.74 80.28
2011 11.65 -8
2012 5.68 6.28
2013 -27.79 -34.89
2014 -0.19 -18.1
2015 -11.59 -13.59
2016 8.63 15.86
2017 12.57 7.12
2018 -1.15 -9.4
2019 18.83 15.36
2020 24.43 47.44
2021 -3.51 -11.55
2022 -0.23 2.64
2023 13.08 -0.72
2024 27.23 21.36
2025 64.69 148.14
2026 4.13 23.32

Source: Macrotrends

Silver’s spikes have also followed by sharp reversals. In 2008, silver fell 26.9% while gold rose 3.4%, showing gold’s relative resilience during the global financial crisis.

And yet, silver rebounded strongly in the recovery years that followed, rising 57.5% in 2009 and 80.3% in 2010.

A Higher-Beta Precious Metal

Silver’s sharper moves reflect its dual role as both a precious metal and an industrial input. When markets weaken, silver can be pressured by slowing industrial demand. But when conditions improve, it can rebound quickly as both investor demand and industrial activity recover.

This matters because silver’s volatility can create larger drawdowns, but also larger price movements. For investors, that makes silver a more tactical precious metals exposure than gold.

Investing in Silver

As demand grows from solar, electrification, and industrial applications, silver remains a key metal to watch for investors tracking long-term supply and demand trends.

Global X Canada’s ETFs can help investors access commodities without choosing individual miners.

To learn more, explore the Global X Silver Miners Index ETF (SLVX).

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See how SILVX offers potential upside through rising prices and operational growth within the silver sector.

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This communication is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to purchase investment products (the “Global X Funds”) managed by Global X Investments Canada Inc. and is not, and should not be construed as, investment, tax, legal or accounting advice, and should not be relied upon in that regard. Individuals should seek the advice of professionals, as appropriate, regarding any particular investment. Investors should consult their professional advisors prior to implementing any changes to their investment strategies. These investments may not be suitable to the circumstances of an investor.

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Mapped: Health Care Spending Per Person by State

2026-07-14 22:11:34

Mapped: Health Care Spending Per Person by State

Key Takeaways:

  • Americans spent an average of $9,717 per person on health care in 2024, ranging from $7,233 in Utah to $14,044 in Alaska.
  • Alaska, Washington, D.C., South Dakota, New York, and West Virginia recorded the highest per-capita spending.
  • Much of the variation reflects differences in health care prices, provider availability, demographics, and geography, not simply how often people receive care.

Health care represents a major share of consumer spending in America, but the amount spent per resident varies considerably by location.

New data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis highlights the differences in per-capita health care spending across the country in 2024.

The map below ranks every state using the latest Personal Consumption Expenditures by State data from the BEA. Figures are reported in current dollars and allocated according to residents’ state of residence.

Which States Spend the Most on Health Care?

Below is a ranking of states based on per-person health care spending:

Rank State Per-Capita Health Care Spending
1 Alaska $14,044
2 District of Columbia $13,865
3 South Dakota $12,451
4 New York $12,221
5 West Virginia $12,055
6 Delaware $11,987
7 Massachusetts $11,985
8 North Dakota $11,667
9 Vermont $11,493
10 Indiana $11,071
11 California $11,054
12 Maine $10,913
13 New Hampshire $10,682
14 Connecticut $10,639
15 Minnesota $10,567
16 New Jersey $10,468
17 Pennsylvania $10,262
18 Ohio $10,202
19 Nebraska $10,192
20 Louisiana $10,148
21 Wisconsin $10,079
22 Missouri $10,036
23 Kentucky $9,964
24 Oregon $9,931
25 Illinois $9,895
26 Rhode Island $9,864
27 Hawaii $9,808
28 Montana $9,747
29 Washington $9,693
30 Wyoming $9,640
31 Florida $9,545
32 Maryland $9,456
33 Virginia $9,123
34 Kansas $9,066
35 Oklahoma $9,052
36 Michigan $9,023
37 Colorado $8,871
38 Tennessee $8,761
39 North Carolina $8,744
40 Georgia $8,680
41 Iowa $8,660
42 Arkansas $8,562
43 Arizona $8,556
44 New Mexico $8,469
45 Mississippi $8,135
46 Idaho $8,078
47 Alabama $7,980
48 Texas $7,807
49 South Carolina $7,741
50 Nevada $7,536
51 Utah $7,233

Alaska spent nearly twice as much per resident on health care as Utah in 2024.

Several Northeastern states, along with South Dakota and Washington, D.C., also ranked near the top. Meanwhile, much of the Mountain West and South recorded below-average spending.

Why Do Some States Spend More Than Others?

Higher spending does not necessarily mean residents receive more medical care.

Numerous studies have found that differences in prices, especially for hospital and physician services, explain much more of the variation in U.S. health spending than differences in how often people use care. Administrative costs, provider wages, and regional labor markets also play major roles.

State-specific factors matter as well. Alaska’s remote geography and limited provider network make delivering care significantly more expensive, while states with older populations often spend more because seniors tend to use more medical services.

Broader insurance coverage can also increase the share of care captured in personal consumption expenditures.

Health Care Spending Continues to Climb

Nationally, health care expenditures continue to rise.

CMS projects U.S. health spending will approach $9 trillion annually by 2034, driven by increased enrollment in Medicare and Medicaid, along with continued growth in health care prices. Despite already spending more per person than any comparable high-income country, the U.S. is expected to devote an even larger share of its economy to health care over the next decade.

International comparisons show the U.S. spends substantially more on health care than other high-income countries, largely because medical services cost more rather than because Americans use dramatically more care.

As national spending continues to rise, the nearly twofold gap between states highlights how geography remains a major factor in what Americans ultimately spend on health care.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed this visualization, check out Americans Pay More for Healthcare, Yet Have Shorter Life Expectancy on the Voronoi app, where you can discover thousands of data-driven charts from trusted sources covering health, economics, markets, and more.

Ranked: Homeownership Rates Around the World

2026-07-14 20:02:04

Ranked: Homeownership Rates Around the World

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.

Key Takeaways

  • Eight of the top 10 countries in the ranking are current or former communist states, led by Slovakia (93.5%) and Romania (92.8%).
  • China ranks fourth after 1990s housing reforms transferred millions of state-owned homes into private ownership.
  • Germany (41.0%) and Switzerland (38.2%) have some of the lowest homeownership rates shown despite being among Europe’s wealthiest economies.

Owning a home is often viewed as a hallmark of financial success, but the countries with the highest homeownership rates may not be the ones many people expect.

This graphic ranks countries by the share of households that own the home they live in, using data from the OECD Affordable Housing Database. China’s figure comes from Clark, Huang, and Yi (2019).

The results show how decades-old housing policies continue to shape ownership patterns around the world.

Eastern Europe Dominates the Rankings

Slovakia leads the ranking with a homeownership rate of 93.5%, followed closely by Romania and Croatia.

Current and former communist states dominate the top of the list, with Lithuania, Bulgaria, Poland, and Latvia also placing in the top 10.

Rank Country Homeownership rate
1 🇸🇰 Slovak Republic 93.5%
2 🇷🇴 Romania 92.8%
3 🇭🇷 Croatia 90.4%
4 🇨🇳 China 90.0%
5 🇱🇹 Lithuania 86.9%
6 🇧🇬 Bulgaria 85.2%
7 🇵🇱 Poland 84.8%
8 🇯🇵 Japan 84.0%
9 🇱🇻 Latvia 80.6%
10 🇮🇸 Iceland 78.4%
11 🇮🇹 Italy 75.2%
12 🇪🇪 Estonia 75.0%
13 🇸🇮 Slovenia 73.9%
14 🇪🇸 Spain 73.6%
15 🇨🇷 Costa Rica 73.2%
16 🇪🇺 European Union 72.5%
17 🇳🇴 Norway 72.3%
18 🇵🇹 Portugal 72.1%
19 🇨🇿 Czechia 71.9%
20 🌐 OECD average 70.1%
21 🇲🇽 Mexico 69.6%
22 🇨🇦 Canada 68.6%
23 🇬🇧 United Kingdom 68.4%
24 🇮🇪 Ireland 68.2%
25 🇬🇷 Greece 68.1%
26 🇲🇹 Malta 66.0%
27 🇧🇪 Belgium 65.9%
28 🇺🇸 United States 65.3%
29 🇳🇿 New Zealand 63.9%
30 🇨🇾 Cyprus 63.5%
31 🇦🇺 Australia 62.7%
32 🇱🇺 Luxembourg 62.3%
33 🇫🇮 Finland 61.0%
34 🇫🇷 France 58.5%
35 🇸🇪 Sweden 58.2%
36 🇰🇷 South Korea 58.0%
37 🇳🇱 Netherlands 57.9%
38 🇨🇱 Chile 57.1%
39 🇹🇷 Türkiye 55.7%
40 🇩🇰 Denmark 52.2%
41 🇦🇹 Austria 47.9%
42 🇩🇪 Germany 41.0%
43 🇨🇭 Switzerland 38.2%
44 🇨🇴 Colombia 36.0%

This pattern reflects the legacy of socialist housing systems, under which state-owned homes were often privatized and sold to occupants at heavily discounted prices following the fall of communism.

China’s Housing Reforms Created a Nation of Homeowners

China ranks fourth with a homeownership rate of 90.0%.

Much of this can be traced to sweeping housing reforms introduced during the 1990s, when many publicly owned apartments were sold to residents at subsidized prices.

The reforms rapidly expanded private homeownership and helped make residential property a major store of household wealth for many Chinese families. Today, China’s housing market remains central to both consumer wealth and the country’s broader economy.

Many Wealthy Countries Have Lower Ownership Rates

Several of the world’s richest economies rank surprisingly low on the list.

Germany has a homeownership rate of 41.0%, while Switzerland sits at 38.2%, the lowest among the countries shown.

Strong rental markets, tenant protections, and relatively affordable long-term renting can reduce the pressure to buy in these countries.

Canada (68.6%), the United States (65.3%), Australia (62.7%), and France (58.5%) all sit near or below the OECD average of 70.1%. Together, the rankings suggest that housing policy, financing systems, and rental markets can influence homeownership as much as national income.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Ranked: The Countries Where $1,000 Takes the Longest to Earn on Voronoi.

Germany Quit Nuclear. So Why Is It Importing More?

2026-07-14 12:26:03

Germany Quit Nuclear. So Why Is It Importing More?

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways:

  • Germany generated 91,790 GWh of nuclear electricity in 2015, but none in 2024 after completing its reactor phaseout.
  • Estimated nuclear-generated electricity imports more than tripled over the same period, reaching 18,313 GWh in 2024.
  • Ending domestic nuclear generation does not necessarily eliminate nuclear electricity from an interconnected power system.

Germany’s decision to phase out nuclear power has become one of the world’s most closely watched energy policy experiments. While the country’s last reactors shut down in 2023, Germany remains deeply connected to Europe’s integrated electricity market, where power moves across national borders.

The visualization above, created by DataPulse Research using data from SMARD, estimates how much of Germany’s imported electricity originated from nuclear generation between 2015 and 2024.

Germany’s Nuclear Generation Falls to Zero

Germany’s nuclear generation and estimated nuclear electricity imports are shown below.

Year Nuclear Power
Generated Domestically (GWh)
Nuclear Power
Imported (GWh)
2015 91,790 5,830
2016 84,630 4,363
2017 76,320 3,979
2018 76,000 6,407
2019 75,070 9,211
2020 64,380 8,757
2021 69,130 7,235
2022 34,710 4,542
2023 7,220 11,778
2024 0 18,313

As domestic generation steadily declined, estimated nuclear electricity imports followed a different trajectory, reaching their highest level in 2024.

Germany’s nuclear phaseout was shaped by decades of political debate and accelerated after the Fukushima disaster in 2011.

As reactors closed, the country expanded renewable energy while continuing to trade electricity across Europe’s interconnected grid. Domestic nuclear generation fell by more than 90,000 GWh between 2015 and 2024.

Why Nuclear Power Still Crosses Borders

Once electricity enters Europe’s interconnected grid, it flows according to supply, demand, and market prices rather than national energy policies. As a result, electricity imported into Germany can include nuclear-generated power from neighboring countries even though Germany no longer operates nuclear reactors.

The nuclear share of Germany’s imports may rise when nuclear generation is abundant and competitively priced in connected markets. According to DataPulse Research’s estimates, these imports increased sharply after Germany’s final reactors closed, highlighting the difference between where electricity is produced and where it is consumed.

Why Some Countries Are Ramping Up Nuclear Investment

Germany’s experience stands in contrast to countries that continue expanding nuclear capacity. Nuclear power can provide reliable, low-carbon electricity with high capacity factors while reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels. Countries with rapidly growing electricity demand or limited domestic energy resources may therefore include it in a diversified energy strategy.

Nuclear power remains one of the energy sector’s most debated technologies. Supporters emphasize its ability to generate large amounts of low-carbon electricity around the clock, while critics point to construction costs, radioactive waste, project delays, and safety concerns. The broader nuclear debate continues to shape energy policy around the world.

The U.S., France, China, Russia, and South Korea maintain extensive reactor fleets because of decades of investment, energy security priorities, and long-term industrial policy. Several are also planning additional reactors. Meanwhile, Germany belongs to a relatively small group of countries that have fully phased out nuclear generation.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

Want to explore more data-driven stories on global security and energy? Check out Mapped: Countries With the Most Nuclear Missiles on the Voronoi app.

Ranked: Where Wealth Is Most Concentrated

2026-07-14 01:47:34

Ranked: Where Wealth Is Most Concentrated

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.

Key Takeaways

  • The UAE and Russia rank highest for wealth concentration, each scoring 82 on UBS’s 2025 wealth Gini Index.
  • The U.S. ranks sixth, with a wealth concentration score of 77, placing it ahead of India, Mexico, and China.
  • Among the countries shown, six of the 10 lowest wealth concentration scores are in Europe.

Two countries can have similar levels of wealth but vastly different levels of who owns it.

Using data from the UBS Global Wealth Report 2026, this graphic shows countries by their wealth Gini Index, a measure of how concentrated household wealth is within each economy. A score of 100 indicates one person owns all the wealth, while 0 represents perfect equality.

Behind every economy is a different story of who owns the nation’s wealth, and who benefits most from its growth.

Countries With the Most Concentrated Wealth

The table below ranks selected countries by UBS’s 2025 Wealth Gini Index, which measures how unevenly household wealth is distributed. The rankings include 32 of the 56 markets analyzed in the report, spanning major advanced and emerging economies.

Rank Country Gini Index 2025 (0-100) Region
1 🇦🇪 UAE 82 Middle East
2 🇷🇺 Russia 82 Europe
3 🇿🇦 South Africa 81 Africa
4 🇧🇷 Brazil 81 Americas
5 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia 78 Middle East
6 🇺🇸 U.S. 77 Americas
7 🇸🇪 Sweden 74 Europe
8 🇮🇳 India 74 Asia
9 🇹🇷 Türkiye 73 Middle East
10 🇲🇽 Mexico 72 Americas
11 🇨🇱 Chile 71 Americas
12 🇸🇬 Singapore 69 Asia
13 🇨🇭 Switzerland 68 Europe
14 🇩🇪 Germany 67 Europe
15 🇮🇱 Israel 66 Middle East
16 🇭🇰 Hong Kong SAR 64 Asia
17 🇵🇹 Portugal 61 Europe
18 🇨🇳 China (Mainland) 60 Asia
19 🇬🇷 Greece 60 Europe
20 🇬🇧 UK 59 Europe
21 🇹🇼 Taiwan 59 Asia
22 🇫🇷 France 57 Europe
23 🇰🇷 South Korea 57 Asia
24 🇵🇱 Poland 57 Europe
25 🇪🇸 Spain 57 Europe
26 🇭🇺 Hungary 56 Europe
27 🇮🇹 Italy 54 Europe
28 🇯🇵 Japan 53 Asia
29 🇦🇺 Australia 53 Oceania
30 🇶🇦 Qatar 47 Middle East
31 🇧🇪 Belgium 46 Europe
32 🇸🇰 Slovakia 38 Europe

America’s Wealth Gap Stands Out

The U.S. ranks sixth overall with a wealth Gini score of 77, behind only the UAE, Russia, South Africa, Brazil, and Saudi Arabia.

That ranking comes despite America having the world’s largest millionaire population with 23.6 million people, or roughly 41% of all millionaires globally. At the same time, the country ranks second worldwide in average wealth per adult but only 28th in median wealth, highlighting the large gap between the wealth of the average household and that of the typical American.

Together, these figures illustrate how substantial gains in household wealth have been concentrated among the wealthiest Americans, pushing the U.S. near the top of the global wealth concentration rankings.

Europe Dominates the Lowest Wealth Concentration Rankings

At the opposite end of the spectrum, Europe accounts for six of the 10 lowest wealth concentration scores in the dataset.

Slovakia ranks lowest overall with a score of 38, followed by Belgium (46), Italy (54), Hungary (56), and France, Poland, and Spain (57). The UK also sits well below the U.S. at 59.

Many of these countries combine widespread homeownership, stronger social safety nets, and higher levels of median wealth than countries near the top of the rankings.

Wealth Concentration Is Different From Income Inequality

A country’s wealth concentration is not the same as its income inequality.

Income measures what people earn each year, while wealth includes assets accumulated over decades, such as homes, businesses, pensions, investments, and inheritances. Because wealth compounds over time, it is typically distributed much more unevenly than income.

As housing wealth, stock markets, and private business ownership continue to drive household fortunes, who owns a country’s wealth may become just as important as how much wealth the economy creates.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the countries with the most millionaires per capita.