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Mapped: The Most Affordable ZIP Code for Renters by State

2025-01-30 21:11:03

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

A map showing the most affordable ZIP codes in each state

The Most Affordable ZIP Codes in Each U.S. State

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.

The cost of renting is anything but uniform—shaped by geography, neighborhood trends, and even the quirks of a few city blocks. What’s affordable in one part of town might be out of reach just a short walk away.

This map, created by NeoMam Studios for CashNetUSA, visualizes the most affordable ZIP codes to rent across America.

NeoMam Studios compared the average household incomes and annual rent costs in each ZIP code using U.S. Census data and Zillow’s Observed Rent Index (ZORI). ZIP codes were ranked by affordability, the most affordable being the ZIP codes with the lowest rental costs as a percentage of local incomes.

Figures below 30% of gross income were considered as the standard affordable rent outlay defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Which ZIP Codes Are the Most Affordable?

Below, we show each state’s most affordable ZIP code, the ZIP code’s location, and its average annual rent (from ZORI) as a share of local median household income.

State ZIP Code Location Annual Rent as % of Local Median Household Income Avg. Rent Cost (ZORI, $) Median Household Income ($)
Kansas 66224 Leawood 10.57% $1,850.00 $143,093
Michigan 48324 West Bloomfield 11.50% $3,069.76 $203,000
Texas 78248 San Antonio 12.29% $2,231.67 $138,220
Pennsylvania 15228 Pittsburgh 12.57% $1,960.28 $128,333
Iowa 50323 Urbandale 12.77% $1,734.63 $145,774
South Dakota 57005 Brandon 13.51% $2,648.78 $185,093
Ohio 43035 Lewis Center 13.71% $2,048.33 $132,573
Illinois 60304 Oak Park 13.92% $1,259.17 $122,986
North Dakota 58554 Mandan 14.23% $1,021.94 $76,612
Indiana 46077 Zionsville 14.28% $1,255.50 $131,002
Minnesota 55906 Rochester 14.57% $1,561.98 $125,060
Missouri 63141 Creve Coeur 14.93% $2,104.16 $152,326
Tennessee 38024 Dyersburg 14.95% $1,475.98 $127,195
Alabama 35213 Mountain Brook 14.99% $1,570.11 $137,408
Arkansas 72223 Little Rock 15.19% $1,217.72 $116,278
Arizona 85253 Paradise Valley 15.27% $969.22 $71,601
Nebraska 68130 Omaha 15.29% $1,540.35 $109,405
Louisiana 70605 Lake Charles 15.38% $1,043.45 $81,404
New York 11731 East Northport 15.51% $2,025.78 $138,261
Wyoming 82716 Gillette 16.01% $1,816.65 $111,410
Wisconsin 54956 Neenah 16.24% $2,033.56 $159,846
Georgia 30005 Alpharetta 16.58% $1,929.44 $98,459
Kentucky 40059 Prospect 16.72% $2,716.04 $170,000
North Carolina 27613 Raleigh 16.90% $1,940.98 $83,946
New Jersey 7090 Westfield 17.17% $1,387.50 $55,402
Mississippi 38801 Tupelo 17.25% $2,040.67 $137,097
Oklahoma 73142 Oklahoma City 17.28% $1,750.91 $116,756
Maryland 21043 Ellicott City 17.58% $1,397.75 $112,328
West Virginia 26062 Weirton 17.80% $2,563.01 $163,333
Virginia 23113 Midlothian 17.86% $2,041.67 $103,934
South Carolina 29708 Fort Mill 18.00% $623.89 $50,064
California 94062 Emerald Lake Hills 18.15% $916.67 $59,482
Florida 33556 Odessa 18.33% $1,935.56 $124,449
Utah 84025 Farmington 18.49% $2,243.88 $161,079
Montana 59501 Havre 18.49% $1,489.03 $116,849
Connecticut 6410 Cheshire 18.54% $810.56 $56,393
Oregon 97221 Portland 18.66% $1,425.00 $55,511
Colorado 80108 Castle Pines 18.83% $1,170.83 $96,403
Washington 98040 Mercer Island 19.17% $1,204.58 $83,648
Massachusetts 1720 Acton 19.37% $2,050.00 $117,408
Nevada 89511 Reno 19.57% $1,950.00 $100,751
Idaho 83221 Blackfoot 19.95% $1,234.43 $97,530
New Mexico 87544 Los Alamos 20.95% $1,662.43 $107,901
Alaska 99517 Anchorage 22.12% $1,062.50 $63,897
New Hampshire 3045 Goffstown 23.23% $1,113.33 $98,902
Delaware 19810 Wilmington 23.52% $1,522.56 $172,829
Rhode Island 2865 Lincoln 23.57% $791.67 $53,360
Hawaii 96822 Honolulu 27.75% $1,584.86 $85,964
Maine 4210 Auburn 30.05% $1,731.25 $162,705
Vermont 5701 Rutland 30.80% $917.50 $77,356

The average rent in Leawood 66224, Kansas, costs 10.57% of the local average income—the most affordable rent level of any U.S. ZIP code.

The 66224 ZIP code is right at the border of Kansas and Missouri, and just a couple of ZIP codes south of Leawood 66211, home to Kansas’ priciest residential real estate.

Midland, Texas, has the highest proportion of affordable housing against local incomes, with 97.5% of rentals available below 30% of the local average income.

Several ZIP codes within major metropolitan areas ranked as the most affordable in their states, including Portland (97221) in Oregon and Pittsburgh (15228) in Pennsylvania.

Over on the West Coast, Los Angeles doesn’t have a single ZIP code where the average home is affordable to rent, according to the 30% rule.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about housing affordability in the U.S., check out this graphic that visualizes median house prices in the U.S.

The post Mapped: The Most Affordable ZIP Code for Renters by State appeared first on Visual Capitalist.

Mapped: The Most Popular Languages to Learn by Country

2025-01-30 20:18:11

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

Map showing the most popular languages people want to learn by country in 2024.

Mapped: The Most Popular Languages to Learn by Country

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.

Across the 7,000 languages spoken worldwide, just five languages command roughly half of the global population.

With 1.5 billion speakers, English is spoken more than any other language, followed by Mandarin (1.2 billion), and Hindi (610 million). Given its prevalence in business and political spheres, it continues to be the most sought-after language to learn today even as proficiency in China, Japan, and South Korea has declined in recent years.

This graphic from NeoMam Studios shows the most popular languages to learn in 2024, based on data from Word.Tips.

Global Language Learning Trends

For the rankings, monthly Google search volumes were analyzed across countries based on “Study X language” or “Learn X language”. These phrases were translated across 119 of the most-spoken languages globally.

Each language was ranked according to their search volume as of May 2024, shown in the table below:

Country Most Popular Language Second Most Popular Language
🇩🇿 Algeria Arabic French
🇧🇭 Bahrain Arabic German
🇪🇬 Egypt Arabic English
🇮🇶 Iraq Arabic English
🇯🇴 Jordan Arabic German
🇰🇼 Kuwait Arabic German
🇱🇧 Lebanon Arabic English
🇱🇾 Libya Arabic English
🇲🇦 Morocco Arabic English
🇴🇲 Oman Arabic English
🇵🇸 Palestine Arabic English
🇶🇦 Qatar Arabic English
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia Arabic Chinese
🇺🇬 Uganda Arabic Bengali
🇦🇪 United Arab Emirates Arabic German
🇬🇾 Guyana Chinese Spanish
🇭🇰 Hong Kong Chinese Spanish
🇱🇦 Laos Chinese English
🇹🇼 Taiwan Chinese Minnan
🇻🇪 Venezuela Chinese Russian
🇦🇫 Afghanistan English Farsi
🇦🇴 Angola English French
🇦🇲 Armenia English German
🇦🇹 Austria English Italian
🇦🇿 Azerbaijan English Russian
🇧🇾 Belarus English Russian
🇧🇯 Benin English German
🇧🇴 Bolivia English Japanese
🇧🇷 Brazil English Spanish
🇧🇬 Bulgaria English German
🇰🇭 Cambodia English Chinese
🇨🇲 Cameroon English German
🇨🇴 Colombia English Italian
🇨🇷 Costa Rica English Spanish
🇨🇮 Cote D'Ivoire English Arabic
🇨🇩 Democratic Republic of the Congo English Swahili
🇪🇨 Ecuador English Italian
🇸🇻 El Salvador English Italian
🇪🇪 Estonia English German
🇪🇹 Ethiopia English Arabic
🇫🇮 Finland English Ukrainian
🇫🇷 France English Spanish
🇬🇪 Georgia English German
🇩🇪 Germany English Spanish
🇬🇹 Guatemala English Spanish
🇭🇳 Honduras English Russian
🇭🇺 Hungary English German
🇮🇩 Indonesia English Arabic
🇮🇱 Israel English Arabic
🇮🇹 Italy English Italian
🇯🇲 Jamaica English Chinese
🇯🇵 Japan English Korean
🇰🇿 Kazakhstan English Russian
🇰🇬 Kyrgyzstan English German
🇱🇻 Latvia English German
🇲🇺 Mauritius English German
🇲🇽 Mexico English Spanish
🇲🇩 Moldova English Italian
🇲🇪 Montenegro English German
🇲🇿 Mozambique English French
🇳🇮 Nicaragua English Russian
🇳🇬 Nigeria English Hausa
🇵🇰 Pakistan English Korean
🇵🇾 Paraguay English Portuguese
🇵🇪 Peru English Italian
🇵🇱 Poland English Polish
🇵🇹 Portugal English Portuguese
🇨🇬 Republic of the Congo English Chinese
🇷🇴 Romania English German
🇷🇼 Rwanda English German
🇸🇳 Senegal English Arabic
🇸🇴 Somalia English Arabic
🇸🇪 Sweden English Thai
🇹🇿 Tanzania English Swahili
🇹🇭 Thailand English Chinese
🇹🇳 Tunisia English Arabic
🇹🇷 Turkey English Polish
🇹🇲 Turkmenistan English Russian
🇺🇦 Ukraine English Ukrainian
🇬🇧 United Kingdom English Spanish
🇺🇿 Uzbekistan English Russian
🇻🇳 Vietnam English Chinese
🇿🇲 Zambia English German
🇵🇭 Philippines Filipino Korean
🇧🇸 Bahamas French Spanish
🇧🇼 Botswana French German
🇨🇦 Canada French Japanese
🇳🇱 Netherlands French English
🇦🇱 Albania German English
🇧🇦 Bosnia and Herzegovina German English
🇭🇷 Croatia German Arabic
🇨🇾 Cyprus German English
🇩🇰 Denmark German Spanish
🇬🇭 Ghana German English
🇬🇷 Greece German English
🇰🇪 Kenya German French
🇱🇺 Luxembourg German French
🇲🇹 Malta German English
🇳🇦 Namibia German Portuguese
🇲🇰 North Macedonia German English
🇷🇸 Serbia German French
🇸🇰 Slovakia German English
🇸🇮 Slovenia German Japanese
🇿🇼 Zimbabwe German English
🇫🇯 Fiji Hindi Chinese
🇦🇷 Argentina Italian English
🇨🇱 Chile Italian Korean
🇨🇭 Switzerland Italian English
🇺🇾 Uruguay Italian Spanish
🇦🇺 Australia Japanese Spanish
🇰🇷 South Korea Japanese English
🇧🇩 Bangladesh Korean Bengali
🇧🇹 Bhutan Korean Chinese
🇧🇳 Brunei Korean Malayalam
🇮🇳 India Korean English
🇲🇳 Mongolia Korean German
🇲🇲 Myanmar Korean Japanese
🇳🇵 Nepal Korean Japanese
🇸🇬 Singapore Korean Chinese
🇱🇰 Sri Lanka Korean English
🇲🇾 Malaysia Malayalam English
🇱🇹 Lithuania Russian English
🇷🇺 Russia Russian English
🇧🇪 Belgium Spanish Arabic
🇨🇿 Czech Republic Spanish Polish
🇩🇴 Dominican Republic Spanish English
🇮🇸 Iceland Spanish German
🇮🇪 Ireland Spanish French
🇳🇿 New Zealand Spanish Filipino
🇳🇴 Norway Spanish Urdu
🇵🇦 Panama Spanish English
🇵🇷 Puerto Rico Spanish Arabic
🇪🇸 Spain Spanish English
🇹🇹 Trinidad and Tobago Spanish Arabic
🇺🇸 United States Spanish Japanese
🇿🇦 South Africa Zulu Swahili

Overall, English is the most desired language to learn in 63 countries, dropping substantially from 98 countries in 2021.

Due to shifting geopolitical dynamics, English proficiency is falling across East Asia. For instance, China ranked 91st out of 116 countries on English proficiency compared to ranking 38th four years earlier. Despite this, English is the most popular language people want to learn across virtually every global region.

Ranking in second is German, driven by its popularity in European nations including Greece, Denmark, and Croatia. While it falls behind English by a wide margin, it stands as the most sought-after language to learn in 16 countries likely due to Germany being the world’s third-largest economy.

Arabic follows next in line, being the top language in 15 countries mostly found in the Middle East. Since 2021, this number has grown by more than double as countries like Saudi Arabia and Egypt witnessed strong search volumes. Globally, Arabic is the sixth-most common language, with 274 million speakers around the world.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic from a global perspective, check out this graphic on the 12 most spoken languages globally.

The post Mapped: The Most Popular Languages to Learn by Country appeared first on Visual Capitalist.

Charted: All U.S., Russian, and Chinese Leaders Since 1975

2025-01-30 03:47:42

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

This graphic tracks the changing leaders of America, Russia, and China, since 1975.

Use This Visualization

Charted: All U.S., Russian, and Chinese Leaders Since 1975

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.

This graphic tracks America’s, Russia’s, and China’s government leaders since 1975 using data from Britannica.

Only one of these countries is a functioning democracy—though all three hold some form of elections. Thus, this graphic is not a comparison but serves as a look back through history.

Regime Changes in America, Russia, And China

Since 1975, the U.S. has had eight different presidents. In that same time, Russia has had six leaders, and China four.

Year 🇺🇸 U.S. 🇷🇺 Russia / Societ Union Pre-1991 🇨🇳 China
2025 Donald Trump Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2024 Joe Biden Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2023 Joe Biden Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2022 Joe Biden Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2021 Joe Biden Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2020 Donald Trump Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2019 Donald Trump Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2018 Donald Trump Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2017 Donald Trump Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2016 Barack Obama Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2015 Barack Obama Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2014 Barack Obama Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2013 Barack Obama Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2012 Barack Obama Vladimir Putin Xi Jinping
2011 Barack Obama Dmitry Medvedev Hu Jintao
2010 Barack Obama Dmitry Medvedev Hu Jintao
2009 Barack Obama Dmitry Medvedev Hu Jintao
2008 George W. Bush Dmitry Medvedev Hu Jintao
2007 George W. Bush Vladimir Putin Hu Jintao
2006 George W. Bush Vladimir Putin Hu Jintao
2005 George W. Bush Vladimir Putin Hu Jintao
2004 George W. Bush Vladimir Putin Hu Jintao
2003 George W. Bush Vladimir Putin Hu Jintao
2002 George W. Bush Vladimir Putin Hu Jintao
2001 George W. Bush Vladimir Putin Jiang Zemin
2000 Bill Clinton Vladimir Putin Jiang Zemin
1999 Bill Clinton Vladimir Putin Jiang Zemin
1998 Bill Clinton Boris Yeltsin Jiang Zemin
1997 Bill Clinton Boris Yeltsin Jiang Zemin
1996 Bill Clinton Boris Yeltsin Jiang Zemin
1995 Bill Clinton Boris Yeltsin Jiang Zemin
1994 Bill Clinton Boris Yeltsin Jiang Zemin
1993 Bill Clinton Boris Yeltsin Jiang Zemin
1992 George H. W. Bush Boris Yeltsin Jiang Zemin
1991 George H. W. Bush Boris Yeltsin Jiang Zemin
1990 George H. W. Bush Mikhail Gorbachev Jiang Zemin
1989 George H. W. Bush Mikhail Gorbachev Jiang Zemin
1988 Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev Deng Xiaoping
1987 Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev Deng Xiaoping
1986 Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev Deng Xiaoping
1985 Ronald Reagan Mikhail Gorbachev Deng Xiaoping
1984 Ronald Reagan Konstantin Chernenko Deng Xiaoping
1983 Ronald Reagan Yuri Andropov Deng Xiaoping
1982 Ronald Reagan Yuri Andropov Deng Xiaoping
1981 Ronald Reagan Leonid Brezhnev Deng Xiaoping
1980 Jimmy Carter Leonid Brezhnev Deng Xiaoping
1979 Jimmy Carter Leonid Brezhnev Deng Xiaoping
1978 Jimmy Carter Leonid Brezhnev Deng Xiaoping
1977 Jimmy Carter Leonid Brezhnev Hua Guofeng
1976 Gerald Ford Leonid Brezhnev Hua Guofeng
1975 Gerald Ford Leonid Brezhnev Mao Zedong

From this graphic, we can see that POTUS has regularly shifted back and forth between the Democrat and Republican parties. For reference, U.S. presidents cannot serve for more than two elected terms.

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the highest office became the president of Russia. The Russian president is elected by popular vote to a six-year term, with a term limit of two consecutive terms.

Amendments made in 2020 have exempted Vladimir Putin from being term-limited by excluding his previous terms.

Meanwhile, in China, the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has functioned as the nation’s most powerful position since the late 1980s. Chosen through internal party processes, the General Secretary serves a five-year term with no limit on reelection. The individual holding this office also becomes China’s president (the head of state), a role once considered more ceremonial.

China’s current president is Xi Jinping who has held the position since 2013. He is serving his third term after constitutional changes in 2018 removed presidential term limits. Under his presidency, China has strengthened its global influence, economy, and centralized governance within the country.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

Political leaning affects perceptions of parts of the American economy. Check out Democrats vs Republicans: Opinions on U.S. Industries to see where they diverge.

The post Charted: All U.S., Russian, and Chinese Leaders Since 1975 appeared first on Visual Capitalist.

Mapped: Annual Inflation Rate by U.S. Region

2025-01-30 02:21:45

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

A map showing CPI inflation by U.S. region

Use This Visualization

Mapping Inflation Across America

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.

In December 2024, U.S. annual inflation stood at 2.9%, surpassing the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

This marked an increase from 2.7% in November, driven by rising costs in key categories like housing and energy.

However, inflation usually varies heavily by location. This graphic visualizes the CPI inflation (change in consumer prices) from December 2023 to December 2024 by U.S. region and select metropolitan areas.

Data comes from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and is updated as of January 2025.

City inflation figures are for their metropolitan statistical area, which is made up of one or more counties that contain a city of 50,000 or more inhabitants.

Which U.S. Region Experienced The Highest Inflation in 2024?

Region/city CPI Inflation (Change in consumer prices from December 2023 to December 2024)
Northeast 3.5%
Midwest 3.0%
South 2.8%
West 2.5%
Chicago-Naperville-Elgin 3.9%
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim 3.4%
New York-Newark-Jersey City 4.3%
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell 2.6%
Urban Alaska 2.3%
Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue 2.7%
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land 1.0%
Overall U.S. inflation 2.9%

In 2024, inflation varied significantly across U.S. regions, with the Northeast experiencing the highest rate at 3.5% and the West seeing the lowest at 2.5%.

The Northeast, with its higher population density and reliance on imported energy, faced steeper price increases, particularly in housing (5.2%) and utilities (7.1%).

The New York metropolitan area, which includes New York, Newark, and Jersey City, recorded the highest annual CPI inflation out of these major metropolitan areas at 4.3%, 1.4 percentage points higher than the U.S. average.

Similarly to the rest of its region, New Yorkers faced the sharpest year-over-year price jumps in fuels and utilities (10.5%) and housing (6%) compared to December 2023.

Houston recorded the lowest inflation rate among major metro areas at 1.0%, driven primarily by differences in housing costs.

While housing expenses rose 4.1% nationwide since December 2023, they increased by just 0.4% in Houston.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about economic indicators by U.S. area, check out this graphic that visualizes the 10 states with the lowest real GDP growth in 2023.

The post Mapped: Annual Inflation Rate by U.S. Region appeared first on Visual Capitalist.

Mapped: All of the World’s Countries, by Income Group

2025-01-29 23:41:53

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

Map showing countries by income classification.

Use This Visualization

Mapped: The World’s Countries, by Income Group

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.

Globally, the share of low income countries has declined significantly over the past quarter century, dropping from 30.7% in 2000 to just 11.9% today.

China transitioned out of a low income country in 1999 and, by 2010, had achieved upper middle-income status, a position it continues to hold. Similarly, India, which was a low income country two decades ago, has grown into a middle income country driven by rapid economic growth.

This graphic shows countries by gross national income (GNI) per capita, based on data from the World Bank.

Breaking Down Countries by Income Classification

For country income classifications, the World Bank used GNI per capita, which includes all income earned by a country’s residents and businesses, both domestically and abroad .

Below, we show how 218 countries worldwide fall into each income category:

Income Group GNI per Capita 2025 Global Share of Countries
Low income $1,145 or less 11.9%
Lower middle income $1,146 to $4,515 23.4%
Upper middle income $4,516 to $14,005 25.2%
High income $14,005 or more 39.4%

For 2025 the classification uses 2023 GNI per capita. Data for Venezuela as of 2021.

Today, 86 countries are considered high income, amounting to 39.4% of the share of countries worldwide.

Since 2000, this share has risen notably from 25.4% of the global total. In Europe, the former Eastern Bloc countries of Hungary, Poland, Czechia, and Slovakia transitioned into high income countries supported by market reforms and income growth.

Meanwhile, Chile and Uruguay ascended to high income status driven by a 2000s commodities boom and rising GDP per capita. Chile stands as the world’s largest copper producer and the second largest producer of lithium.

In Asia, South Korea’s economic rise stemmed from vast exports to China and specialization in key industries. Over the past 25 years, it is among the few countries in the region to overcome the ‘middle-income trap’.

A Closer Look at Income Classification by Region

When looking at income classification from a regional perspective, we can see that high income countries are becoming more prevalent across key regions:

Region Share of High Income Countries Share of Upper Middle Icome Countries Share of Lower Middle Income Countries Share of Low Income Countries Number of Countries
North America 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 3
Europe & Central Asia 69.0% 25.9% 5.2% 0.0% 58
Latin America & Caribbean 42.9% 47.6% 9.5% 0.0% 42
East Asia & Pacific 42.1% 23.7% 31.6% 2.6% 38
Middle East & North Africa 38.1% 19.0% 33.3% 9.5% 21
Sub-Saharan Africa 2.1% 12.5% 39.6% 45.8% 48
South Asia 0.0% 12.5% 75.0% 12.5% 8

Overall, 42.9% of countries in Latin America and the Caribbean are high income, mostly found across island nations.

In the Middle East, oil-rich nations of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE have among the highest GDP per capita in the region. Notably, Saudi Arabia emerged as the region’s first trillion-dollar economy fueled by massive oil reserves and government initiatives.

By contrast, Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia have the lowest share of wealthy countries, yet growth in key countries has been promising. In 2024, Sub-Saharan Africa was home to nine of the top 20 fastest-growing economies including Niger, Senegal, and Libya.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic from a U.S.-based perspective, check out this graphic on GDP per capita by state.

The post Mapped: All of the World’s Countries, by Income Group appeared first on Visual Capitalist.

Charted: How Generations Will Shape the Workforce by 2035

2025-01-29 21:14:43

See this visualization first on the Voronoi app.

https://www.voronoiapp.com/demographics/Baby-Boomers-Will-Fully-Exit-the-Workforce-by-2035--3793

Use This Visualization

How Generations Will Shape the Workforce by 2035

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.

The year 2025 marks the start of a new generation: the Betas. This group will include everyone born over the next 15 years.

In this graphic, we compare the current workforce with the projected workforce by 2035, broken down by generation, based on data from McCrindle as of May 2024.

Baby Boomers Will Fully Exit the Workforce

Baby Boomers (ages 61-79), who comprise 20% of the U.S. population and own half of the country’s net wealth, will be virtually out of the workforce by 2035.

Gen Z (ages 16-30) and younger generations are projected to make up half of the workforce within the next 10 years.

Generation Age Group Current Workforce Share Workforce (2035P)
Boomers 1946-1964 (age 61-79) 12% 0%
Gen X 1965-1979 (age 46-60) 27% 21%
Gen Y 1980-1994 (age 31-45) 34% 29%
Gen Z 1995-2009 (age 16-30) 27% 31%
Gen Alpha 2010-2024 (age 15 and younger) 0% 19%

Meanwhile, Generation Alpha (15 and younger) is expected to grow rapidly, reaching 19% of the workforce by 2035. This generation is also projected to surpass Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z in size, with a population of more than 2 billion, making it the largest generation in history.

Generations Defined

For this analysis, McCrindle examines the following cohorts, each adhering to a 15-year pattern:

  • Baby Boomers (1946-1964, age 61-79): Born during the post-WWII baby boom, they drove major cultural, social, and economic shifts.
  • Generation X (1965-1979, age 46-60): Known for embracing entrepreneurship, anti-establishment movements, and economic prosperity.
  • Millennials (1980-1994, age 31-45): Also referred to as Generation Y, they are known for their tech-savviness, social consciousness, and a shift away from traditional goals like homeownership.
  • Generation Z (1995-2009, age 16-30): The first generation to grow up with smartphones, social media, and constant internet access from a young age.
  • Generation Alpha (2010-2024, age 15 and younger): The children of Millennials, growing up in a highly digital, tech-driven world.
  • Gen Beta (2025-2039, 1-not born yet): The generation just beginning, born into a world of rapid technological and environmental change.

Learn More on the Voronoi App 

If you enjoyed this topic, check out this graphic that shows the distribution of wealth in the United States from 1990 to 2023 by generation.

The post Charted: How Generations Will Shape the Workforce by 2035 appeared first on Visual Capitalist.