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Sub-Saharan Africa Compared by Economy > GDP > Composition, by end use > Household consumption

DEFINITION: This entry is derived from Economy > GDP > Composition, by end use, which shows who does the spending in an economy: consumers, businesses, government, and foreigners. The distribution gives the percentage contribution to total GDP of household consumption, government consumption, investment in fixed capital, investment in inventories, exports of goods and services, and imports of goods and services, and will total 100 percent of GDP if the data are complete.
household consumption consists of expenditures by resident households, and by nonprofit institutions that serve households, on goods and services that are consumed by individuals. This includes consumption of both domestically produced and foreign goods and services.
government consumption consists of government expenditures on goods and services. These figures exclude government transfer payments, such as interest on debt, unemployment, and social security, since such payments are not made in exchange for goods and services supplied.
investment in fixed capital consists of total business spending on fixed assets, such as factories, machinery, equipment, dwellings, and inventories of raw materials, which provide the basis for future production. It is measured gross of the depreciation of the assets, i.e., it includes investment that merely replaces worn-out or scrapped capital. Earlier editions of The World Factbook referred to this concept as Investment (gross fixed) and that data now have been moved to this new field.
investment in inventories consists of net changes to the stock of outputs that are still held by the units that produce them, awaiting further sale to an end user, such as automobiles sitting on a dealer’s lot or groceries on the store shelves. This figure may be positive or negative. If the stock of unsold output increases during the relevant time period, investment in inventories is positive, but, if the stock of unsold goods declines, it will be negative. Investment in inventories normally is an early indicator of the state of the economy. If the stock of unsold items increases unexpectedly – because people stop buying - the economy may be entering a recession; but if the stock of unsold items falls - and goods "go flying off the shelves" - businesses normally try to replace those stocks, and the economy is likely to accelerate.
exports of goods and services consist of sales, barter, gifts, or grants of goods and services from residents to nonresidents.
imports of goods and ...
Full definition
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CONTENTS

# COUNTRY AMOUNT DATE GRAPH
1 Sao Tome and Principe 132.9% 2013
2 Liberia 125.6% 2013
3 Seychelles 101.5% 2013
4 Comoros 99.6% 2013
5 Central African Republic 91.3% 2013
6 Lesotho 90.8% 2013
7 Burundi 88.9% 2013
8 Rwanda 88.6% 2013
9 The Gambia 88.3% 2013
10 Togo 87.2% 2013
11 Guinea 87% 2013
12 Madagascar 86.2% 2013
13 Ethiopia 85.6% 2013
14 Sierra Leone 84.6% 2013
15 Uganda 80.8% 2013
16 Senegal 80.5% 2013
17 Swaziland 79.9% 2013
18 Kenya 79.8% 2013
19 Benin 77.9% 2013
20 Cote d'Ivoire 76.8% 2013
21 Malawi 75.9% 2013
22 Mozambique 75.4% 2013
23 Guinea-Bissau 74.6% 2013
24 Mauritius 74% 2013
25 Zimbabwe 68% 2013
26 Cameroon 67.4% 2013
27 Chad 66.5% 2013
28 Mali 66.3% 2013
29 Democratic Republic of the Congo 65.9% 2013
30 Sudan 65.4% 2013
31 Niger 64.9% 2013
32 Eritrea 64% 2013
33 Ghana 60.9% 2013
34 Tanzania 60.6% 2013
=35 Burkina Faso 60.4% 2013
=35 South Africa 60.4% 2013
37 Namibia 59.4% 2013
38 Djibouti 59.2% 2013
39 Zambia 58.8% 2013
40 Cape Verde 56% 2013
41 Mauritania 54.7% 2013
42 Botswana 53.5% 2013
43 Angola 48.7% 2013
44 Nigeria 47.4% 2013
45 Gabon 37.3% 2013
46 South Sudan 34.9% 2013
47 Equatorial Guinea 27.4% 2013

Citation

Sub-Saharan Africa Compared by Economy > GDP > Composition, by end use > Household consumption

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