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Mapped: The World’s Oil Chokepoints
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Mapped: The World’s Oil Chokepoints
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Key Takeaways
The Strait of Malacca, between Malaysia and Indonesia, is the world’s busiest oil chokepoint, carrying about 29.1% of global maritime oil trade.
About one-fifth of global oil consumption flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
Roughly 84% of crude oil moving through the Strait of Hormuz is destined for Asian markets.
Oil markets rely on a handful of narrow maritime passages to keep supply flowing. These oil supply chokepoints are critical arteries of the global energy system, moving tens of millions of barrels per day. This visualization maps the world’s most important oil transit chokepoints and their share of global maritime oil trade.
The data for this visualization comes from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). It highlights the volume of crude and petroleum liquids that passed through key maritime chokepoints in the first half of 2025, measured in million barrels per day (mb/d), and their share of total world maritime oil trade.
In total, about 73 million barrels per day of oil moved through major maritime chokepoints, representing the majority of globally traded seaborne oil.
The Strait of Malacca: The Busiest Oil Corridor
The Strait of Malacca, between Malaysia and Indonesia, is the world’s busiest oil chokepoint. Roughly 23.2 million barrels per day flowed through this narrow channel in the first half of 2025, accounting for about 29.1% of global maritime oil trade.
Location2025 H1 volume (mb/d)% of World Maritime Oil Trade
Strait of Malacca23.229.1%
Strait of Hormuz20.926.2%
Cape of Good Hope9.111.4%
Danish Straits4.96.1%
Suez Canal & SUMED Pipeline4.96.1%
Bab el-Mandeb4.25.3%
Turkish Straits (Dardanelles)3.74.6%
Panama Canal2.32.9%
The Strait of Malacca connects the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea, making it a crucial route for oil shipments to China, Japan, and South Korea. Its narrow width and heavy traffic make it vulnerable to congestion and geopolitical tension.
The Strait of Hormuz: A Critical Energy Artery
The Strait of Hormuz, located between Oman and Iran, handled about 20.9 million barrels per day in the first half of 2025—roughly one-fifth of global oil consumption. It connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea and is deep and wide enough to accommodate the world’s largest crude oil tankers.
Approximately 84% of crude oil moved through Hormuz is destined for Asian markets, including China, India, Japan, and South Korea. Because so much Gulf production depends on this route, any disruption can send shockwaves through global oil prices.
Other Key Chokepoints Across the Globe
Beyond Malacca and Hormuz, several other passages play important roles in global oil flows. The Suez Canal and SUMED Pipeline transported about 4.9 million barrels per day, linking the Red Sea to the Mediterranean. Nearby, the Bab el-Mandeb carried roughly 4.2 million barrels per day, connecting the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden.
In Europe, the Danish Straits and Turkish Straits serve as key gateways for Russian and Caspian oil exports, moving about 4.9 million and 3.7 million barrels per day, respectively.
Meanwhile, the Panama Canal handled roughly 2.3 million barrels per day, while longer alternative routes such as the Cape of Good Hope carried about 9.1 million barrels per day as tankers traveled between the Atlantic and Indian oceans.
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Mapped: The Average Lifetime Credit Card Debt in Every U.S. State
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The Average Lifetime Credit Card Debt in Every U.S. State
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Key Takeaways
Americans accumulate about $398,000 in credit card debt over their adult lifetimes, on average.
Alaska, New Jersey, and Connecticut have the highest lifetime totals, exceeding $450K.
Iowa, Wisconsin, and Kentucky have the lowest lifetime credit card debt levels in the U.S.
The average American accumulates nearly $400,000 in credit card debt over their lifetime.
But the total varies significantly depending on where people live. In some states, the typical lifetime total exceeds $450,000, while in others it sits closer to $320,000.
This map, based on data from JG Wentworth, shows which states accumulate the most and least credit card debt over a lifetime.
Which States Accumulate the Most Credit Card Debt?
Check out the data, which excludes any interest charges, below:
RankStateAverage Lifetime Credit Card Debt
1Alaska$484,620
2New Jersey$456,300
3Connecticut$454,080
4Hawaii$453,600
5Maryland$449,520
6Texas$448,020
7Florida$443,520
8Nevada$438,480
9Colorado$436,020
10Georgia$434,280
11Virginia$432,000
12California$424,800
13New York$420,600
14Washington$418,500
15Massachusetts$411,180
16Delaware$410,460
17Arizona$408,000
18Illinois$403,560
19New Hampshire$401,520
20Rhode Island$401,160
21Utah$391,920
22South Carolina$389,880
23North Carolina$386,040
24Wyoming$384,360
25Louisiana$381,540
26Oklahoma$377,460
27Pennsylvania$374,700
28Tennessee$374,580
29Oregon$371,940
30Idaho$367,860
31Montana$367,320
32Kansas$364,920
33Alabama$364,440
34Minnesota$364,080
35Missouri$362,520
36New Mexico$361,380
37North Dakota$359,460
38Nebraska$356,700
39Michigan$355,920
40Vermont$355,680
41Ohio$352,260
42Arkansas$349,560
43Maine$349,560
44South Dakota$343,020
45Indiana$337,260
46Mississippi$333,180
47West Virginia$325,620
48Kentucky$323,940
49Wisconsin$322,200
50Iowa$319,740
Alaska has the highest lifetime credit card debt at $484,620, 21.8% above the national average. The Arctic state typically ranks high in cost of living; its remoteness adds complexity to shipping in food and fuel, which elevates prices.
New Jerseyans and Connecticuters rack up $456,300 and $454,080 of credit card debt in their lifetimes, respectively, reflecting higher costs for rent, food, and utilities. Interestingly, New Jersey and Connecticut have good salaries compared with other states, suggesting higher income enables greater access to credit.
Average lifetime credit card debt exceeds $400,000 in 20 states.
Midwestern states Iowa and Wisconsin have the lowest levels of average credit card debt at $319,740 and $322,200, respectively.
Kentucky, where public school students must complete a financial literacy course before graduating, trails closely at $323,940.
Consumer Debt Has Risen in Recent Years
Consumer spending plays a crucial role in the U.S. economy; it accounted for nearly 70% of GDP in the third quarter of 2025. Meanwhile, over half (56%) of all credit card users have some kind of revolving credit card debt, which is where payments are deferred for periodic instalments, highlighting debt’s parallel role.
While consumer debt has risen alongside inflation, mortgages, vehicles, and student loans, household debt in the U.S. is much lower than in countries such as Switzerland, Australia, and its neighbor Canada.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
To learn more about global debt, check out this graphic which breaks down countries with the highest household debt.
The Entire Global Economy in 2026 in One Chart (GDP, PPP)
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The Entire Global Economy in 2026 in One Chart (GDP, PPP)
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Key Takeaways
Purchasing power parity (PPP) adjusts a country’s economic output to account for differences in cost of living.
The global economy sits at over $219 trillion by this metric, of which nearly half is found in Asia.
At over $43.5 trillion, China has the world’s largest economy by GDP (PPP).
The global economy is worth roughly $219 trillion in 2026 when measured by purchasing power parity (PPP), which adjusts economic output for differences in cost of living.
This visualization shows the size of every country’s economy using PPP-adjusted GDP, making it easier to compare how national economies stack up around the world.
These projections for 2026 come from the International Monetary Fund.
How PPP Changes the Global Economic Rankings
When comparing economies using PPP, the global ranking looks very different from nominal GDP.
While the United States is the world’s largest economy by nominal GDP, when adjusting for PPP China has actually been the world’s dominant economy since 2014.
Today the Chinese economy is valued at $43.5 trillion, well ahead of the $31.8 trillion seen in the United States.
RankCountryGDP (PPP, billions of international dollars)
1 China43,491.5
2 United States31,821.3
3 India19,143.4
4 Russia7,340.8
5 Japan6,923.3
6 Germany6,323.5
7 Indonesia5,358.3
8 Brazil5,161.1
9 France4,657.2
10 United Kingdom4,592.1
11 Turkey3,976.1
12 Italy3,815.9
13 Mexico3,552.7
14 South Korea3,486.5
15 Spain2,935.7
16 Saudi Arabia2,845.7
17 Canada2,814.5
18 Egypt2,533.2
19 Nigeria2,392.0
20 Poland2,120.6
21 Taiwan2,068.9
22 Australia2,060.7
23 Vietnam1,942.5
24 Iran1,933.9
25 Thailand1,917.3
26 Bangladesh1,902.9
27 Pakistan1,762.3
28 Philippines1,590.5
29 Argentina1,577.5
30 Malaysia1,564.9
31 Netherlands1,562.8
32 Colombia1,238.4
33 South Africa1,057.0
34 United Arab Emirates1,000.0
35 Singapore988.8
36 Kazakhstan973.4
37 Romania949.3
38 Belgium925.7
39 Algeria915.8
40 Switzerland909.1
41 Ireland836.7
42 Sweden809.5
43 Chile740.4
44 Iraq739.1
45 Ukraine730.8
46 Austria705.0
47 Peru682.8
48 Czech Republic677.7
49 Norway621.1
50 Hong Kong618.1
51 Israel600.5
52 Portugal556.4
53 Ethiopia530.8
54 Denmark529.3
55 Uzbekistan511.0
56 Greece485.1
57 Hungary478.5
58 Morocco457.5
59 Kenya430.3
60 Angola417.2
61 Qatar410.6
62 Finland384.9
63 Dominican Republic353.7
64 Belarus319.5
65 Tanzania317.9
66 Ecuador315.9
67 Ghana314.6
68 New Zealand309.1
69 Guatemala297.1
70 Côte d'Ivoire289.1
71 Myanmar286.4
72 Kuwait285.9
73 Azerbaijan282.2
74 Bulgaria279.2
75 Slovak Republic266.9
76 Oman245.9
77 Venezuela231.4
78 Serbia225.6
79 Dem. Rep. of the Congo225.5
80 Panama211.0
81 Croatia207.4
82 Uganda205.3
83 Nepal194.9
84 Tunisia193.6
85 Cameroon183.3
86 Costa Rica178.0
87 Lithuania173.1
88 Puerto Rico166.3
89 Cambodia160.0
90 Turkmenistan159.0
91 Paraguay145.1
92 Zimbabwe144.9
93 Jordan138.0
94 Sudan135.9
95 Uruguay135.1
96 Libya132.8
97 Slovenia128.1
98 Georgia123.0
99 Bahrain118.1
100 Luxembourg108.6
101 Senegal107.6
102 Zambia105.9
103 Macao97.0
104 Guyana94.2
105 El Salvador92.2
106 Honduras90.9
107 Latvia85.7
108 Guinea84.4
109 Laos83.0
110 Bosnia and Herzegovina82.2
111 Armenia79.5
112 Mongolia78.4
113 Mali78.3
114 Burkina Faso77.6
115 Benin76.5
116 Yemen71.2
117 Estonia69.6
118 Kyrgyzstan68.7
119 Madagascar68.1
120 Tajikistan67.7
121 Nicaragua66.6
122 Niger66.3
123 Albania66.3
124 Mozambique65.4
125 Cyprus64.4
126 Rwanda63.5
127 Chad63.1
128 Gabon59.6
129 North Macedonia56.1
130 Botswana54.8
131 Trinidad and Tobago53.1
132 Papua New Guinea50.7
133 Moldova48.5
134 Malta46.9
135 Brunei Darussalam45.3
136 Republic of Congo44.2
137 Malawi44.2
138 Mauritius43.7
139 Mauritania43.1
140 Namibia39.8
141 Jamaica39.6
142 Haiti37.6
143 Togo35.4
144 Sierra Leone34.8
145 Equatorial Guinea34.3
146 Kosovo34.0
147 Somalia33.9
148 Iceland32.8
149 Montenegro22.6
150 South Sudan18.9
151 The Bahamas18.0
152 Eswatini16.7
153 Fiji15.9
154 Maldives15.8
155 Suriname15.5
156 Bhutan15.4
157 Burundi15.2
158 Liberia12.1
159 The Gambia11.0
160 Djibouti10.7
161 Liechtenstein8.45
162 Central African Republic7.94
163 Lesotho7.59
164 Timor-Leste7.30
165 Guinea-Bissau7.08
166 Barbados7.03
167 Cabo Verde6.77
168 Andorra6.67
169 Belize6.50
170 Aruba5.61
171 Saint Lucia5.52
172 Seychelles4.49
173 Comoros3.87
174 Antigua and Barbuda3.43
175 San Marino2.94
176 Grenada2.62
177 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines2.47
178 Solomon Islands2.27
179 Samoa1.84
180 Saint Kitts and Nevis1.83
181 São Tomé and Príncipe1.65
182 Dominica1.53
183 Vanuatu1.12
184 Tonga0.84
185 Kiribati0.50
186 Micronesia, Fed. States of0.47
187 Palau0.35
188 Marshall Islands0.30
189 Nauru0.15
190 Tuvalu0.06
China is far from alone in representing Asia among the world’s largest economies, however. Asian countries today contribute 49% of the global economy, solidifying the continent’s place as the new center of international trade and production.
India is the third-largest PPP-adjusted economy worldwide, at $19.1 trillion, while Japan ($6.9 trillion), Indonesia ($5.4 trillion), and South Korea ($3.5 trillion) all see multi-trillion-dollar boosts compared to their nominal GDP owing to cheaper costs of living.
At 4.7 billion people, Asia is the most populous continent worldwide, and many of its smaller developing economies, such as Vietnam and Thailand (both $1.9 trillion), are expected to continue to grow rapidly in the coming years, indicating the continent’s continued dominance going forward.
The European Gap
If there’s one region where the difference between nominal and PPP-adjusted GDP is felt, it’s Europe. By nominal standards, Germany is the largest economy on this continent, followed by the United Kingdom, France, Italy, and Russia.
However, when adjusting for relative purchasing power Russia sees a massive boost, as a cheaper overall country, and soars to become Europe’s top economy at $7.3 trillion. By this metric, in fact, Russia is fourth worldwide behind only China, the U.S., and India.
France also surpasses the United Kingdom in this regard, but by and large the Eurozone economies fall behind Asian peers like Indonesia or Japan, which are able to acquire or produce goods at a more competitive rate.
The Boon of Emerging Markets
Outside of Eurasia, the story for emerging markets is much of the same. Brazil ($5.2 trillion) and Mexico ($3.6 trillion) each leapfrog Canada ($2.8 trillion) to become the second- and third-largest economies of the Americas, respectively.
Meanwhile, in Africa, home to a mere six percent of global GDP share, the three emerging-market economies of Egypt, Nigeria, and South Africa are responsible for roughly $6 trillion in total PPP-adjusted economic output.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out The Global Cost of Living Index 2026 on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Charted: Global Energy Flows at Risk in the Strait of Hormuz
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Global Energy Flows at Risk in the Strait of Hormuz
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Key Takeaways
About 20% of global oil consumption and 20% of LNG trade passes through the Strait of Hormuz.
Nearly 90% of crude and condensate exports through the strait are shipped to Asian markets.
Roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil consumption and LNG trade passes through the Strait of Hormuz, making it one of the most critical energy corridors on the planet.
The narrow waterway between Iran and Oman connects the Persian Gulf to global markets, serving as a vital route for oil and gas exports from major producers including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the UAE, and Qatar.
Tensions involving Iran have periodically raised concerns about disruptions to traffic through the strait, which could affect global energy markets.
This visualization highlights what moves through the Strait of Hormuz each day—from oil tankers and LNG carriers to the share of global energy consumption dependent on the route. Data comes from Lloyd’s List and the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
How Much Oil Moves Through the Strait of Hormuz?
The table below summarizes the key energy flows that depend on the Strait of Hormuz.
MetricValue
Cargo vessels passing daily~100
Global oil consumption via Hormuz20%
Global seaborne oil trade via Hormuz27%
Global LNG trade via Hormuz20%
Crude & condensate sent to Asia89%
LNG sent to Asia83%
U.S. crude imports via Hormuz7%
U.S. petroleum consumption via Hormuz2%
Roughly 100 cargo-carrying vessels pass through the strait on an average day in 2026. Around 60–70% of these vessels are oil tankers and gas carriers, reflecting the region’s dominant role in global energy exports.
In fact, about 20% of global oil consumption moves through the Strait of Hormuz. In terms of maritime trade, the passage accounts for roughly 27% of all seaborne oil shipments worldwide.
LNG Trade Also Relies on the Strait
The Strait of Hormuz is not only critical for oil. Around 20% of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) trade also travels through this corridor.
Major LNG exporters such as Qatar rely heavily on the strait to ship natural gas to global markets. As demand for LNG rises—especially in Asia and Europe—this shipping route becomes even more important for energy security.
Asia Is the Most Exposed Region
Asia is the region most dependent on energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz. The region’s heavy reliance reflects its large energy demand and limited domestic oil and gas resources. About 89% of crude oil and condensate passing through the strait is shipped to Asian markets.
Similarly, roughly 83% of LNG exports traveling through the corridor are destined for Asia. Major importers include China, India, Japan, and South Korea.
By contrast, the United States is far less reliant on the route. Only about 7% of U.S. crude imports come through the strait, and roughly 2% of U.S. petroleum liquids consumption depends on these flows.
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If you enjoyed today’s post, check out America’s Hottest Oil State? New Mexico on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Where Chinese EVs Are Selling the Most Worldwide
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How Popular Chinese EVs Are in Different Countries
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Key Takeaways
Chinese-made BEVs account for nearly 90% of Mexico’s EV sales and over 60% in Indonesia.
They represent 26% of UK sales but remain below 1% in the U.S.
While China dominates domestic EV production, its brands are increasingly visible in showrooms across Europe, Asia, and Latin America, but have minimal presence in the United States. This visualization shows the share of battery electric vehicles (BEVs) sold in selected countries that were made in China from 2018 to 2025.
The data for this graphic comes from Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. The figures include battery electric vehicles only, excluding hybrids.
Mexico and Indonesia: Breakout Markets
Mexico has quickly become one of the strongest overseas markets for Chinese EVs. In 2025, 89.9% of all BEVs sold in Mexico were made in China, up sharply from 28.3% in 2023. In volume terms, Chinese-made EV sales surged from 3,145 units in 2023 to 53,742 in 2025.
% of BEVs Made in China20182019202020212022202320242025
China98.0%95.2%99.3%100.0%100.0%99.9%100.0%100.0%
India0.0%0.0%0.0%0.0%1.2%2.3%2.7%2.9%
Japan0.0%0.0%0.0%23.3%11.3%8.7%12.5%25.5%
Australia0.0%0.0%0.0%67.7%77.3%82.5%76.5%79.5%
Austria0.0%0.4%2.1%13.4%20.6%21.8%30.2%22.4%
Belgium0.0%0.1%4.6%18.7%23.1%19.7%23.5%16.2%
Canada0.0%0.0%0.1%1.6%1.9%20.4%19.9%0.8%
Denmark0.0%0.0%5.4%14.0%20.4%26.5%23.7%14.8%
Finland0.0%0.0%1.0%7.5%16.1%13.9%24.2%16.1%
France0.0%0.0%2.6%14.5%26.1%31.4%16.3%13.0%
Germany0.0%0.0%1.2%10.7%19.5%18.0%18.8%15.9%
Indonesia0.0%0.0%0.0%0.3%0.1%3.2%39.8%61.6%
Ireland0.0%0.0%0.8%8.6%11.8%20.9%29.4%21.0%
Israel77.3%64.0%54.6%70.8%72.3%68.2%76.9%84.8%
Italy0.0%0.0%0.8%14.1%17.0%28.5%36.7%37.0%
Mexico0.0%0.0%0.0%0.0%4.8%28.3%82.4%89.9%
Netherlands0.0%1.6%9.0%14.7%13.5%17.9%27.6%17.4%
New Zealand0.0%0.1%8.1%62.4%69.9%63.9%46.6%70.5%
Norway0.0%0.0%10.2%23.0%23.7%19.2%26.3%19.1%
Portugal0.0%0.0%0.3%10.2%18.3%25.3%38.7%30.8%
South Korea0.0%0.0%0.0%0.1%7.0%13.5%23.4%30.9%
Spain0.0%0.0%0.5%14.0%20.7%29.6%42.0%35.9%
Sweden0.0%0.0%6.4%21.7%22.3%21.8%27.1%17.2%
Switzerland0.0%0.0%3.1%20.3%21.6%12.2%20.1%15.7%
UK0.0%1.7%6.4%12.2%27.3%25.0%24.0%26.0%
USA0.0%0.0%0.1%0.5%1.4%0.8%0.3%0.5%
Indonesia shows a similar trajectory. Chinese BEVs accounted for just 3.2% of sales in 2023, but that figure jumped to 61.6% by 2025. Sales volumes climbed from 543 vehicles to 64,252 over the same period, underscoring how quickly Chinese brands have scaled in emerging markets.
Strong Footholds in Europe and Asia-Pacific
In the UK, Chinese-made BEVs represented 26.0% of total EV sales in 2025, totaling 129,069 vehicles. Several European markets—including Spain (35.9%), Portugal (30.8%), and Italy (37.0%)—also show meaningful penetration.
Australia stands out even more, with Chinese brands accounting for 79.5% of BEV sales in 2025. New Zealand (70.5%) and Israel (84.8%) also report high shares.
The U.S. Remains an Outlier
Despite China’s dominance in global EV manufacturing, the U.S. market remains largely closed to Chinese-made BEVs. In 2025, they accounted for just 0.5% of American EV sales, or 6,070 vehicles.
RankCountry2025 Sales
1 China7,968,936
2 UK129,069
3 Germany87,650
4 Australia82,147
5 South Korea66,783
6 Indonesia64,252
7 Mexico53,742
8 Israel48,250
9 France46,493
10 Spain40,009
11 Norway35,562
12 Italy35,348
13 Netherlands30,958
14 Belgium23,740
15 Japan20,553
16 Denmark19,707
17 Sweden18,242
18 Portugal17,180
19 Austria14,496
20 Switzerland8,923
21 USA6,070
22 Ireland5,351
23 India5,332
24 New Zealand5,226
25 Finland4,589
26 Canada792
Trade policy, tariffs, and geopolitical tensions have limited Chinese automakers’ access to the U.S. market.
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Ranked: The 15 Countries With the Most Supercomputers
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Ranked: The Countries With the Most Supercomputers
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Key Takeaways
The U.S. has 171 supercomputers, four times more than the next country, Japan, which has 43.
China is tied for third alongside Germany, both with 40 supercomputers.
Supercomputers are used for everything from weather forecasting and high-powered simulations to artificial intelligence and defense.
The number of supercomputers a country has gives an indication of their technological and economic positioning, and how they prioritize frontier research.
This graphic ranks the countries with the most supercomputers, and the data comes from TOP500’s November 2025 list.
Which Countries Have the Most Supercomputers?
The U.S., the birthplace of supercomputers, dominates the list at 171. The figure is four times higher the number of supercomputers Japan has, which comes in second place at 43.
The data table below shows the number of supercomputers per country as of November 2025:
CountrySupercomputers
United States171
Japan43
Germany40
China40
France23
Canada19
Italy18
South Korea15
Taiwan10
Brazil10
Norway9
United Kingdom9
Sweden8
Poland8
Netherlands7
Saudi Arabia7
India6
Singapore5
United Arab Emirates5
Russia5
Australia4
Finland3
Switzerland3
Israel3
Czechia3
Spain3
Slovenia2
Ireland2
Austria2
Kazakhstan2
Thailand2
Turkey2
Iceland1
Luxembourg1
Slovakia1
Denmark1
Bulgaria1
Hungary1
Portugal1
Belgium1
Morocco1
Argentina1
Vietnam1
China and Germany trail closely, tied in third and fourth place at 40 supercomputers.
The ranking is significantly top-heavy, as the top three countries have more supercomputers than all the other 43 countries combined. In total, 26 countries have five or fewer supercomputers each, while 11 have just one supercomputer.
It is not necessarily smaller countries that have fewer supercomputers. Singapore, for example, has the same number as Russia and India at five. The Singaporean government recently launched a supercomputing hub as it looks to become Southeast Asia’s AI leader.
Increasing AI-Driven Supercomputer Demand
Demand for supercomputers is increasing alongside AI, which requires massive computational power to be trained and run, which far surpass what regular computers are capable of.
There are different types of supercomputers but generally they can crunch vast and complex datasets at speed, far surpassing humanity’s capabilities. By outputting useful information, supercomputers are used to make decisions across health, climate, and material science, which is why they are tipped to hold the key to some of society’s greatest challenges.
Nordic countries actually share access to their supercomputers in efforts to “enable excellence” and contribute towards the UN’s sustainable Development Goals.
The Finland-based LUMI supercomputer, the ninth most powerful in the world, was set up specifically with this in mind; it is hosted by a consortium of 10 countries, including the Nordics and their neighbor Estonia, to share resources and increase researcher access to some of the world’s most powerful computers.
The EU-funded RAISE center was set to develop novel AI technologies that can run effectively on supercomputers, while the U.S. is ramping up partnerships with AI companies to stack its national labs with powerful compute clusters.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
To learn more about supercomputers, check out this graphic on Voronoi which breaks down the largest computing clusters.
Ranked: The Countries Adding the Most to Global GDP (2026–2030)
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The Countries Adding the Most to Global GDP (2026–2030)
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Key Takeaways
China (+$5.7T), the U.S. (+$5.0T), and India (+$2.1T) account for nearly half (49.7%) of total expected GDP added through 2030.
Suriname is forecasted to be the world’s fastest growing economy over the next 5 years, with 137% GDP growth, according to the IMF.
Over the next five years, nearly half of all projected global GDP growth is expected to come from just three countries: China, the United States, and India.
While nearly every economy is projected to expand through 2030, the bulk of new output will be concentrated among a small group of heavyweight nations.
This ranking looks at which nations are expected to add the most to global GDP between 2026 and 2030, based on IMF World Economic Outlook (WEO) projections. Importantly, these figures reflect nominal GDP increases in U.S. dollars and are not in real terms (i.e. adjusted for inflation).
China and the U.S. Lead in Absolute Growth
China ranks first in total GDP added, projected to expand by $5.7 trillion between 2026 and 2030. The United States follows closely behind at $5.0 trillion. Despite slower percentage growth compared to emerging markets, their sheer size means even modest expansion translates into massive dollar gains.
RankCountryGDP Added (2026-2030, $Billions), Projected
1 China$5,686.2
2 United States$4,993.0
3 India$2,122.4
4 United Kingdom$974.1
5 Germany$685.6
6 Japan$656.3
7 Indonesia$528.9
8 Brazil$521.8
9 Canada$489.6
10 France$450.6
11 Mexico$411.3
12 Australia$387.0
13 Türkiye$385.7
14 Spain$338.2
15 South Korea$334.5
16 Russia$320.4
17 Italy$283.5
18 Saudi Arabia$280.2
19 Poland$276.4
20 Philippines$212.6
21 Taiwan$198.4
22 Bangladesh$197.5
23 Netherlands$194.5
24 Egypt$190.3
25 Switzerland$184.5
26 Argentina$174.7
27 UAE$163.7
28 Vietnam$155.7
29 Malaysia$141.1
30 Iran$135.7
31 Israel$132.7
32 Ireland$130.7
33 Sweden$120.6
34 Singapore$115.1
35 Kazakhstan$109.7
36 Nigeria$109.3
37 Thailand$92.6
38 Ethiopia$92.2
39 Colombia$90.5
40 Hong Kong SAR$90.3
41 Belgium$88.1
42 Denmark$85.8
43 Uzbekistan$81.6
44 Austria$81.1
45 Norway$74.1
46 Iraq$72.0
47 Romania$69.5
48 Czech Republic$68.5
49 South Africa$68.4
50 Chile$67.8
Meanwhile, India stands out as the only country to appear in both top-10 lists—ranking third in total GDP added (+$2.1 trillion) while also placing in the top 10 for percentage growth.
The Top 10 Drive Two-Thirds of Global Expansion
Beyond China, the U.S., and India, other major contributors include the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, Indonesia, Brazil, and Canada.
Collectively, the top 10 countries account for 66.5% of all projected GDP added globally through 2030.
Fastest Growth Comes From Smaller Economies
While the largest economies dominate in absolute dollar gains, the fastest percentage growth is projected to come from much smaller markets.
Suriname, Malawi, and Ethiopia are expected to be the fastest-growing economies in percentage terms through 2030.
RankCountryGDP Growth (2026-2030), Forecast
1 Suriname137%
2 Malawi75.4%
3 Ethiopia73.3%
4 Guinea54.5%
5 Uzbekistan51.2%
6 Yemen49.5%
7 Zambia48.6%
8 Egypt47.6%
9 Uganda47.2%
10 India47.1%
11 Madagascar46.9%
12 Guyana46.5%
13 Tanzania45.3%
14 Bhutan44.9%
15 Turkmenistan43.8%
16 São Tomé & Príncipe43.8%
17 Mozambique43.4%
18 Nepal42.8%
19 Moldova42.7%
20 Sudan40.8%
Suriname is projected to add $6.7 billion to its economy, expanding from a $4.9 billion base in 2026—an increase of roughly 137%. Malawi is expected to grow by $13.5 billion on a $17.9 billion base, marking a gain of about 75%. Ethiopia will add $92.2 billion to its $125.7 billion economy, a rise of approximately 73%.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Wealth Needed to Be in The Richest 1% (by Country) on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
One Buyer Dominates Iran’s Oil Exports
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One Buyer Dominates Iran’s Oil Exports
See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.
Key Takeaways
Recent estimates suggest that 91% of Iran’s oil exports head to China.
As other countries cut ties with the Middle Eastern state amid sanctions, China doubled down on the relationship.
Syria, The United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela are also notable buyers of Iranian oil.
Iran has long faced international sanctions over its nuclear program.
Under President Trump, the U.S. intensified pressure by imposing a broad trading ban and targeting foreign financial institutions that did business with Iran, aiming to curb its nuclear ambitions.
The expanded sanctions left only a small group of countries willing to trade with Iran, the fourth-largest oil producer in OPEC and a major fossil fuel exporter.
This graphic charts the largest purchasers of Iranian oil, based on 2024 customs data from Iran, via TradeImeX.
Iran’s Oil Exports by Country
Dive into the data below:
RankCountryExport Value ($B)Share of Total (%)Estimated Volume (Thousand bpd)
1 China32.590.81460
2 Syria1.183.353
3 United Arab Emirates0.72232
4 Venezuela0.431.219
5 Iraq0.320.914
6 Turkey0.220.610
7 Malaysia0.140.46
8 Oman0.110.35
9 Lebanon0.070.23
10 Sri Lanka0.070.23
Iran earned $35.76 billion from oil exports in 2024, though much of that trade reflects geopolitical alignment as much as market demand.
China took the lion’s share, accounting for over 90% of exports, or $32.5 billion. As other countries reduced imports under international sanctions, China continued buying Iranian crude at scale, cementing its role as Tehran’s primary energy partner.
Syria was the only other country to surpass $1 billion in purchases, importing roughly $1.2 billion worth of oil in 2024, or 3.3% of total exports. The United Arab Emirates and Venezuela followed at 2% and 1.2%, respectively.
In Venezuela’s case, energy trade has included an agreement to swap Venezuelan oil for Iranian condensate amid both countries facing U.S. sanctions.
Iran Sells Its Oil Cheap
The list of countries that Iran sells to has shrunk in recent years as sanctions reshaped trade flows. In 2010, Iranian oil landed in the ports of more than 20 countries, including China, Japan, India, South Korea, and several European nations. Sanctions did not halt exports entirely, but they redirected them toward a far smaller group of buyers.
Today, Iran relies on a shadow fleet of re-flagged tankers and ship-to-ship transfers to obscure cargo origins and bypass restrictions. Price is another incentive: Iranian crude typically trades at a $3–9 per barrel discount to Brent. Its oil is relatively cheap to extract — costing as little as $10 per barrel — compared with Brent prices around $60. That discount is estimated to cost Tehran several billion dollars per year in forgone revenue, effectively the price of maintaining a limited customer base.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
To learn more about Iran’s exports, check out this creator graphic which charts the country’s top export destinations.
Visualized: The Increasing Speed of Cyberattacks
Published 3 hours ago on March 3, 2026
By Ryan Bellefontaine
Graphics & Design
Abha Patil
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The following content is sponsored by Palo Alto
The Increasing Speed of Cyberattacks
Key Takeaways
The speed of cyberattacks is rising as first-quartile time to exfiltration dropped from 276 minutes (2024) to 72 minutes (2025).
With about one in five incidents reaching exfiltration in under an hour, response must begin immediately.
Teams need rapid containment playbooks and longer-horizon hunting to cover both “minutes” and “days” long intrusions.
Cyber intrusions rarely follow a single path once attackers get a foothold. Instead, they pivot across systems to widen impact and deepen damage.
This graphic, in partnership with Unit 42 by Palo Alto Networks, shows how the fastest incidents are accelerating, based on data from Unit 42’s Global Incident Response Report.
What “Time to Exfiltration” Captures
Here is a table that shows first-quartile time to exfiltration in 2024 vs. 2025.
YearFirst-Quartile Time to Exfiltration (Minutes)
2024276
202572
Unit 42 tracks “time to exfiltration,” which spans initial compromise to confirmed data theft. Because attackers move quickly, that clock often decides whether defenders can interrupt the mission.
A Fourfold Drop at the Fastest End
Across Unit 42’s dataset, the median time to exfiltration measured about two days. However, the fastest cases compress that timeline dramatically, which raises the cost of any delay.In the first quartile, time to exfiltration fell from 276 minutes in 2024 to 72 minutes in 2025. As a result, teams lose hours of investigation time in the intrusions that move fastest.
Unit 42 also reports that roughly one in five cases can reach exfiltration in under an hour. Consequently, detection, triage, and containment must begin immediately, not after escalation.
Preparing for Minutes, Not Days
Meanwhile, some intrusions still unfold over days, with deeper reconnaissance and persistence. Therefore, teams need both rapid playbooks and sustained hunting.
They can start by tightening identity controls, instrumenting endpoints and browsers, and automating containment steps.
Finally, measure the mean time to detect and respond, then rehearse decisions before an incident hits. When the speed of cyberattacks defines outcomes, readiness becomes a core control.
See why cyberattacks are getting 4x faster
Related Topics: #technology #cyberattacks #phishing #cyber intrusions #social engineering
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Charted: Oil Trade Through the Strait of Hormuz by Country
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Charted: Oil Trade Through the Strait of Hormuz by Country
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
China receives 37.7% of all oil exports that pass through the Strait of Hormuz, the most of any country.
Asian countries are most affected by a closure of the strait, receiving 89.2% of the Strait’s crude oil and condensate flows.
The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most critical energy chokepoints, with both exporters and importers of crude oil heavily reliant on flows through the Strait.
This visualization maps which countries export crude oil and condensate through the Strait of Hormuz—and, more importantly, which countries import those flows. The data is from the U.S. Energy Information Administration and is for Q1 2025.
Which Countries Export Oil Through the Strait of Hormuz?
Oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz are heavily concentrated among a few Gulf producers. Saudi Arabia accounts for the largest share of crude and condensate exports transiting the strait, at 37.2% of the total.
The data table below breaks down the origin countries and their shares of crude oil and condensate exports through the Strait of Hormuz as of Q1 2025:
CountryShare of the Strait of Hormuz's Oil and Condensate Exports
Saudi Arabia37.2%
Iraq22.8%
United Arab Emirates12.9%
Iran10.6%
Kuwait10.1%
Qatar4.4%
Other1.9%
Iraq follows with 22.8%, while the United Arab Emirates contributes 12.9%. Iran (10.6%) and Kuwait (10.1%) round out the top five exporters. Together, these five countries account for 93.6% of all crude and condensate volumes moving through the strait.
This concentration underscores how closely global oil markets are tied to production in the Persian Gulf.
With recent military conflict in the Middle East and Iran’s announcement that it would attack any ship passing through the Strait, more than 20% of global oil flows are now at risk.
The Countries Reliant on Oil From the Strait of Hormuz
On the demand side, Asia is overwhelmingly reliant on oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz. Asian countries collectively receive 89.2% of the crude oil and condensate that transit the waterway.
The data table below shows the destination countries and their shares of crude oil and condensate exports through the Strait of Hormuz as of Q1 2025:
CountryShare of Oil and Condensate Imports From the Strait of Hormuz
China37.7%
India14.7%
Other Asia13.9%
South Korea12.0%
Japan10.9%
Europe3.8%
United States2.5%
Other4.5%
China alone accounts for 37.7% of total flows—more than any other country by a wide margin. India is the second-largest destination at 14.7%, followed by South Korea at 12.0% and Japan at 10.9%. Other Asian countries make up 13.9% of crude oil and condensate flows that pass through the Strait.
In contrast, the United States receives just 2.5% of these flows, reflecting its increased domestic production and diversified import sources.
Any closure or disruption of the Strait of Hormuz would disproportionately impact Asian economies, particularly China and India, which together receive over half of all volumes passing through the strait.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
To learn more about global crude oil trade flows, check out this graphic visualizing 2024’s biggest crude oil exporters and importers on Voronoi.
Mapped: U.S. Military Bases in the Middle East, and Which Ones Iran Hit
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U.S. Military Bases in the Middle East, and Which Ones Iran Hit
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 United States currently has over 40,000 soldiers deployed across 10 countries in the Middle East.
A majority of U.S. bases and military assets in and around the Persian Gulf were hit by Iranian retaliatory airstrikes.
In response to large-scale airstrikes by the U.S. and Israel on February 28, 2026, Iran launched a series of retaliatory airstrikes on U.S. military assets across the Middle East.
The U.S. has had a substantial military presence in the Middle East for decades, including most notably during the two Gulf Wars. Today between 40,000-50,000 American military personnel are stationed across roughly 10 countries in the region.
This map shows the locations of unclassified U.S. military bases and assets across the Middle East, using modified 2025 data from the Council on Foreign Relations.
Notably, in addition to targeting formal military facilities such as the Al Dhafra base in the United Arab Emirates, the Iranian military also attacked commercial facilities which are used by the U.S. military such as the ports of Duqm and Jebel Ali.
The U.S. Military’s Sprawling Gulf Presence
The most concentrated U.S. military presence in the Middle East is in and around the Persian Gulf, which is home to the largest single source of petroleum worldwide.
The U.S. has military bases in each of the Gulf states except Iran, with Qatar holding the largest single regional base at Al Udeid Air Base. Over 10,000 U.S. military personnel are stationed in that base alone.
The data table below highlights unclassified U.S. military assets around the Middle East, and their status in the current conflict as of March 2nd:
U.S. Military AssetCountryTargeted by Iran?
Ain al-Asad Air Base IraqYes
Akrotiri (RAF) Cyprus (UK base with U.S. troops)Yes
Al Dhafra Air Base United Arab EmiratesYes
Al Udeid Air Base QatarYes
Ali Al-Salem Air Base KuwaitYes
Camp Arifjan KuwaitNo
Camp As Sayliyah QatarNo
Camp Buehring KuwaitYes
Camp Lemonnier DjiboutiNo
Duqm Port OmanYes
Erbil Air Base (Al-Harir) IraqYes
Incirlik Air Base TürkiyeNo
Israel (no base) IsraelYes
Izmir Air Station TürkiyeNo
Jebel Ali Port UAEYes
MFO South Camp (Sinai) EgyptNo
Muwaffaq al-Salti Air Base JordanYes
NE Syria (various) SyriaNo
NSA Bahrain BahrainYes
Prince Sultan Air Base Saudi ArabiaYes
Thumrait / Masirah OmanNo
Tower 22 JordanNo
Over 13,500 soldiers are stationed in Kuwait, with this small Gulf country welcoming hefty U.S. military personnel following the Gulf Wars. All but one U.S.-Kuwaiti base has been targeted by Iran.
American Military Bases Beyond the Gulf
The U.S. also holds Middle Eastern bases beyond the immediate vicinity of Iran, and some of these facilities were also the target of Iranian drones and missiles.
The British airbase of Akrotiri in Cyprus, which hosts U.S. troops, faced a sustained drone attack alleged to have been carried out by the Iran-backed Lebanese paramilitary group Hezbollah. This marks the first attack on a European country within this conflict.
Nearby Israel was also bombarded, while Jordan’s Muwaffaq al-Salti Air Base intercepted missiles over what appeared to be Iran’s farthest land target.
Notably, none of the U.S. military installations in nearby Djibouti, Egypt, or Türkiye appear to have been targeted.
The Spiraling Hostilities in the Middle East to Come
The U.S. and Israeli strikes which began on February 28th decimated much of Iran’s top leadership, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei as well as over 40 others.
Iran’s avowed retaliation has already placed U.S. military personnel across the Middle East on high alert. While the U.S. government has indicated its expectation that the conflict could last for weeks, the significant escalation has already had a severe impact on global markets, owing to the Persian Gulf’s central role in the world’s oil and gas industry.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out How Big is Iran? on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Mapped: America’s Fastest-Growing and Fastest-Shrinking States (2020–2025)
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America’s Fastest-Growing and Shrinking States (2020–2025)
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 U.S. population grew by 10.3 million people (+3.1%) from April 2020 to July 2025, with the South accounting for the majority of gains.
Texas and Florida added the most residents, while New York and California recorded the largest declines.
The map shows percentage change by state, while the surrounding chart highlights total population gains and losses.
Where are Americans moving since 2020?
Between April 2020 and July 2025, the U.S. population grew by more than 10 million people, but growth was heavily concentrated in a handful of states. This map shows the percentage change in each state’s population over the past five years, alongside total gains and losses in residents.
The data for this visualization comes from the U.S. Census Bureau. It measures total population change from April 2020 to July 2025.
The South Dominates Population Growth
The South was the clear growth engine of the country, expanding by 6.0% and adding more than 7.5 million people. Texas led the nation in numeric gains, adding 2.56 million residents. Florida followed closely with 1.92 million new residents, while North Carolina and Georgia also posted strong increases.
RankStatePopulation change (2020-2025)Percent change
1Texas2,560,3238.8%
2Florida1,924,3118.9%
3North Carolina756,5767.2%
4Georgia588,8875.5%
5Arizona465,7146.5%
6South Carolina452,0248.8%
7Tennessee402,7575.8%
8Washington293,5013.8%
9Utah267,3038.2%
10New Jersey259,1912.8%
11Virginia248,6882.9%
12Colorado237,2354.1%
13Idaho190,61010.4%
14Indiana186,7282.8%
15Nevada176,5955.7%
16Alabama167,6513.3%
17Oklahoma163,9344.1%
18Minnesota123,6722.2%
19Massachusetts120,9721.7%
20Missouri115,6281.9%
21Arkansas103,2613.4%
22Ohio101,0650.9%
23Kentucky100,5772.2%
24Maryland83,7071.4%
25Connecticut80,7462.2%
26Wisconsin78,4641.3%
27Delaware70,0027.1%
28Montana60,4735.6%
29Pennsylvania56,6790.4%
30Nebraska56,0262.9%
31Maine51,6563.8%
32Michigan48,5220.5%
33South Dakota48,4385.5%
34Iowa47,8051.5%
35Kansas39,2341.3%
36New Hampshire37,7692.7%
37Oregon36,3040.9%
38North Dakota20,2222.6%
39Rhode Island17,1641.6%
40Wyoming11,8812.1%
41New Mexico8,0060.4%
42District of Columbia4,1010.6%
43Alaska3,8870.5%
44Vermont1,5860.2%
45Mississippi-7,104-0.2%
46Hawaii-22,447-1.5%
47West Virginia-27,612-1.5%
48Louisiana-39,705-0.9%
49Illinois-102,600-0.8%
50California-200,394-0.5%
51New York-201,269-1.0%
In percentage terms, Idaho (+10.4%), Florida (+8.9%), and Texas (+8.8%) were among the fastest-growing states. Lower taxes, job growth, and domestic migration have all contributed to this sustained southern expansion.
Mixed Growth in the West and Midwest
Western states posted moderate overall growth of 1.9%. Arizona (+6.5%), Utah (+8.2%), and Nevada (+5.7%) stood out, while California saw a decline of 200,394 residents (-0.5%).
The Midwest grew just 1.1% overall. States like Indiana and Minnesota saw modest gains, but growth lagged behind the South. Industrial restructuring and slower job creation continue to weigh on parts of the region.
Northeast and Coastal Losses
The Northeast recorded the slowest regional growth at just 0.7%. New York experienced the largest population drop in the country, losing 201,269 residents (-1.0%). Illinois (-102,600) and Louisiana (-39,705) also saw significant declines, while West Virginia (-1.5%) and Hawaii (-1.5%) posted the largest percentage losses.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Mapped: Job Growth in Every U.S. State in 2025 on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Ranked: The World’s Top Startup Hubs
Published 54 minutes ago on March 2, 2026
By Julia Wendling
Graphics & Design
Athul Alexander
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The following content is sponsored by Terzo
Ranked: The World’s Top Startup Hubs
Key Takeaways
The U.S. leads by a wide margin with a score of 254.1, more than 3.5 times higher than the UK in second place (70.7).
Israel (62.2), Singapore (54.7), and Canada (45.4) complete the top five list.
Smaller nations like Estonia and Lithuania show that strong digital infrastructure and business environments can help startups compete globally despite limited scale.
Startup ecosystems are emerging around the world, but a small group of countries continues to lead the charge.
Created in partnership with Terzo, this graphic shows the countries that rank highest by entrepreneurship ecosystem. It’s part of our Markets in a Minute series, which delivers quick economic insights for executives.
A Global Startup Race
According to StartupBlink, the United States dominates with a score of 254.1, more than three times higher than second-place United Kingdom (70.7). Israel (62.2), Singapore (54.7), and Canada (45.4) complete the top five, highlighting a mix of scale-driven giants and highly efficient innovation hubs.
Global Startup Ecosystem Index
RankingCountryScore
1U.S.254.1
2UK70.7
3Israel62.2
4Singapore54.7
5Canada45.4
6Sweden35.3
7Germany33.2
8France32.4
9Switzerland31.7
10Netherlands30.9
11Estonia30.7
12Australia28.8
13China26.9
14Spain23.2
15Finland22.9
16Ireland21.2
17Denmark20.8
18Japan18.1
19Lithuania17.5
20South Korea16.6
The rest of the ranking is spread across Europe. Sweden, Germany, France, Switzerland, and the Netherlands maintain strong positions thanks to deep talent pools and access to capital.
What Makes a Startup Hub?
These scores are based on three core components that together define ecosystem strength.
The first is quantity, which includes variables like the number of startups, investors, and accelerators operating within a country. The second is quality, which includes total private-sector startup investment and startup employment. Finally, the startup business environment measures factors such as diversity, internet speed and affordability, and internet freedom.
By combining these subindexes, the ranking provides a holistic snapshot of where founders have the strongest foundations to launch and scale new ventures.
Data Drives Better Decisions
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Ranked: The World’s Most Indebted Countries Today
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Ranked: The World’s Most Indebted Countries Today
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
Hong Kong ranks first with total debt equal to 380% of GDP, followed by Japan at 372%
The U.S. ranks seventh at 264%, led by government debt (123%) and corporate debt (73%)
How indebted is your country today?
Based on the latest available data (Q4 2025) from the Institute of International Finance’s Global Debt Monitor, several major economies now carry total debt loads exceeding 300% of GDP, meaning their combined household, corporate, and government borrowing is worth more than three years of economic output.
This visualization ranks 35 countries by their total debt-to-GDP ratios, combining household, corporate, and government borrowing into one measure.
Hong Kong Tops the Ranking
With a total debt burden of 380%, Hong Kong has the world’s highest total debt. This small special administrative region (SAR) of China is highly developed and urbanized, counting roughly 7.5 million inhabitants.
While its government debt is a relatively slim 67% and its total household debt of 86% hovers around global developed-country standards, Hong Kong’s corporate debt is a staggering 227% of GDP, making up nearly the entirety of its total debt burden.
The table below shows the total debt burden and breakdowns for household, corporate, and government debt to GDP:
CountryHousehold Debt (% GDP)Nonfinancial Corporate Debt (% GDP)Government Debt (% GDP)Total Debt (% GDP)
Hong Kong8622767380
Japan60113199372
Singapore45130172347
France59156110326
Canada10011897315
China6014297298
United States6873123264
South Korea8911149249
Italy3659141236
Malaysia708866224
Thailand887660223
Bahrain2456143223
United Kingdom745981214
Germany498963200
Israel437170184
Brazil365092178
Jordan275690172
Grenada376468168
Maldives1817132167
India394974163
Vietnam2310732161
Hungary187073161
Chile418631158
Senegal529123156
South Africa343579149
Tunisia233981143
El Salvador222588134
Trinidad and Tobago343565134
Kuwait41837131
Republic of the Congo33593131
Czech Republic325147129
Russia217927127
Ecuador294452125
Morocco203767124
Colombia262868121
Zambia68107120
Mozambique91297118
United Arab Emirates275634117
Poland223559116
Jamaica193660115
Lao PDR111291114
Rwanda122773113
Costa Rica341460108
Saudi Arabia314528105
Oman244435104
Romania112961102
Egypt72075102
Argentina62076101
Kenya92367100
Philippines11265996
Mongolia23244793
Dominican Republic14176091
Gambia767487
Mexico17214886
Peru13413186
Pakistan2107284
Serbia16234483
Côte d'Ivoire8185682
Sri Lanka1071080
Indonesia15244079
Bangladesh6304077
Türkiye10382775
Angola186271
Benin5165171
Ethiopia5164768
Ghana355966
Papua New Guinea485062
Tanzania765062
Kazakhstan19142558
Nigeria1373656
Cameroon383849
Honduras004545
Tajikistan1162239
Uzbekistan003131
However, Hong Kong’s high corporate debt can best be explained by the SAR’s real estate business, in which high-debt transactions are standard. The dynamic real estate sector and related activities contribute roughly a quarter to Hong Kong’s GDP.
Japan’s Government Debt Nears 200% of GDP
In contrast, Japan’s corporate debt (113%) is relatively in line with other OECD and developed peers; however, the government’s sprawling government debt of just shy of 200% of GDP is higher than many countries’ total debt burden.
Government debt woes began to take off following the Lost Decades of economic stagnation which followed the collapse of the Japanese asset price bubble in 1991.
As years of sluggish growth turned into decades, Japanese policymakers opted to incorporate quantitative easing, a policy by which the central bank bought government bonds in order to stimulate economic activity in the country, driving up the country’s national debt in the process.
Today the Bank of Japan owns roughly half of the national debt, while the other half is held in large part by domestic banks and insurance companies.
Debt in the Developed World
Japan is not the only country to have had to accrue debt in response to tough times. Back-to-back crises have forced governments to borrow extensively in recent years, from global COVID-19 stimulus responses to more recent industrial and defense purchases across Europe.
Many governments continue to run large fiscal deficits, while households and businesses face rising borrowing costs amid economic uncertainty.
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If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Biggest Foreign Buyers and Sellers of U.S. Debt on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Ranked: Countries Building the Most Nuclear Reactors
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Ranked: Countries Building the Most Nuclear Reactors
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Key Takeaways
China accounts for 37 of the world’s reactors under construction—more than all other listed countries combined.
India and Russia rank a distant second, with six reactors each currently being built.
As of September 2025, the United States, France, and Canada have no reactors under construction.
China is in the middle of the largest nuclear construction push in the world.
Dozens of reactors are rising across the country, representing nearly 43 gigawatts of new generating capacity. That buildout alone exceeds what every other nation currently has under construction combined.
This chart breaks down which countries are expanding nuclear power in 2025, and below we also cover how much power they are adding to their grids.
The data comes from the World Nuclear Association.
China’s Massive Nuclear Expansion
China currently has 37 reactors under construction, representing roughly 42.9 gigawatts (GW) of new capacity.
That is more than six times the capacity being built in either India or Russia, the next closest countries.
As electricity demand rises and older plants retire, nuclear expansion will play a decisive role in shaping long-term energy security and grid stability.
CountryReactors Under ConstructionMegawatts
China3742.9K
India65.2K
Russia64.2K
Egypt44.8K
Türkiye44.8K
South Korea34.2K
Bangladesh22.4K
Japan22.8K
Ukraine21.9K
United Kingdom23.4K
Argentina10.03K
Brazil11.4K
Hungary11.2K
Iran11.1K
Pakistan11.1K
Slovakia10.5K
Canada00K
France00K
USA00K
Most reactors are initially licensed to operate for about 40 years, though many receive extensions to 60 years or even 80 years with upgrades and maintenance. As older plants reach the end of their lifespans, new reactors are needed to replace retiring capacity, support grid stability, and help countries meet long-term decarbonization goals.
India and Russia in Second Place
India and Russia are tied for second place with six reactors each under construction. India’s projects total 5.2 GW of capacity, slightly above Russia’s 4.2 GW.
After that, activity drops off quickly. Egypt and Türkiye each have four reactors underway, while most other countries are building one or two.
Notably, several established nuclear powers are absent from the list. As of September 2025, the United States, France, and Canada have no reactors under construction.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out How Much Control China Has Over the World’s Critical Minerals on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Ranked: The World’s 50 Most Valuable Companies in 2026
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The World’s 50 Most Valuable Companies in 2026
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
Nvidia leads at $4.8 trillion, followed by Apple ($4.0 trillion) and Alphabet ($3.8 trillion).
Tech firms represent seven of the top 10 companies by market cap.
Along with Nvidia, three other AI-related semiconductor companies—TSMC, Broadcom, and ASML—rank in the top 20 most valuable firms.
Nvidia, with a $4.8 trillion market valuation, is the world’s most valuable company in 2026.
The company has once again surpassed Apple and Alphabet as record sales lift its valuation, despite AI bubble fears. Meanwhile, TSMC’s $2 trillion market cap now exceeds both Meta Platforms and Tesla, ranking in sixth globally.
Using data from CompaniesMarketCap, this graphic shows the 50 most valuable companies worldwide in 2026.
The Top 50 Companies in 2026
Here are the largest companies by market capitalization as of February 25, 2026:
RankNameCountryMarket Cap
1Nvidia U.S.$4,769,090,895,872
2Apple U.S.$4,030,215,225,344
3Alphabet U.S.$3,786,845,192,192
4Microsoft U.S.$2,976,667,402,240
5Amazon U.S.$2,261,686,681,600
6TSMC Taiwan$2,009,122,209,792
7Saudi Aramco Saudi Arabia$1,659,869,263,655
8Meta Platforms U.S.$1,653,772,779,520
9Broadcom U.S.$1,575,548,878,848
10Tesla U.S.$1,566,227,562,496
11Berkshire Hathaway U.S.$1,067,125,637,120
12Walmart U.S.$1,002,825,187,328
13Eli Lilly U.S.$971,747,753,984
14Samsung South Korea$953,387,784,196
15JPMorgan Chase U.S.$818,792,038,400
16Exxon Mobil U.S.$629,201,108,992
17Visa U.S.$603,784,871,936
18Tencent China$602,976,288,768
19ASML Netherlands$592,511,303,680
20Johnson & Johnson U.S.$591,292,792,832
21SK Hynix South Korea$492,511,926,210
22Micron Technology U.S.$482,640,887,808
23Mastercard U.S.$455,227,998,208
24Costco U.S.$441,631,375,360
25Oracle U.S.$425,078,030,336
26AbbVie U.S.$400,878,174,208
27Procter & Gamble U.S.$382,102,667,264
28Roche Switzerland$380,012,805,029
29Bank of America U.S.$377,648,578,560
30Home Depot U.S.$373,943,992,320
31ICBC China$369,137,809,154
32Chevron U.S.$368,560,832,512
33Alibaba China$363,649,957,888
34General Electric U.S.$361,938,288,640
35Caterpillar U.S.$358,505,119,744
36Netflix U.S.$350,804,246,528
37Coca-Cola U.S.$346,150,469,632
38AMD U.S.$343,772,135,424
39Agricultural Bank of China China$331,706,101,844
40China Construction Bank China$329,442,725,971
41LVMH France$324,094,895,625
42HSBC United Kingdom$323,268,870,144
43Novartis Switzerland$322,706,767,872
44Palantir U.S.$320,938,967,040
45AstraZeneca United Kingdom$319,598,690,304
46Toyota Japan$315,160,494,080
47Applied Materials U.S.$313,424,740,352
48Lam Research U.S.$313,366,904,832
49Cisco U.S.$312,610,619,392
50Merck U.S.$305,828,593,664
As the largest publicly-traded company in the world, Nvidia recently posted a record $68.1 billion in quarterly earnings, up 94% year-over-year.
With OpenAI, Oracle, and Microsoft among its largest customers, a string of strong earnings reports has pushed its valuation close to a $5 trillion market capitalization. Still, investor skepticism has tempered share price gains amid concerns about overvaluation.
Apple, Alphabet, and Microsoft follow, each valued at roughly $3 trillion or more.
Saudi Aramco, one of only two non-U.S. companies in the top 10, ranks seventh with a $1.7 trillion valuation. Weaker oil prices have weighed on its performance, with shares down about 30% from their 2022 peak.
Meanwhile, chip designer Broadcom ranks ninth at nearly $1.6 trillion. In addition to producing custom AI accelerator chips for OpenAI and Meta, it designed Google’s tensor processing units (TPUs).
Today, Broadcom is increasingly emerging as a competitor to Nvidia, alongside companies such as Google (#3) and AMD (#38) as Big Tech prepares to spend $650 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026 alone.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the largest U.S. semiconductor firms by market cap.
Visualizing the Human and Economic Cost of the Syrian Civil War
Visualized: The Human and Economic Cost of the Syrian Civil War
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
The Syrian civil war has inflicted profound suffering, killing hundreds of thousands, displacing millions, and reversing decades of development.
Beyond battlefield deaths, conflict has driven spikes in child mortality, extreme poverty, undernourishment, and sharp contraction in GDP per capita.
Even as large-scale fighting has subsided, Syria faces a fragile recovery amid economic collapse and lingering insecurity.
What began in March 2011 as pro-democracy protests against President Bashar al-Assad’s government spiraled into one of the most brutal conflicts of the 21st century, drawing in regional and global powers and resulting in immense human suffering. Over more than a decade of war, hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives, and millions were forced from their homes.
These charts from Our World in Data and sourced from the UN, Eurostat, the IMF, World Bank and others show the many costs of conflict — from fatalities to economic collapse and rising poverty.
Here’s a detailed look at the data behind the war’s impacts:
Category (Syria)Initial Data (2004)Peak Data PointMost Recent Data
Deaths due to fighting~079,0003,600
Deaths from all causes73,000160,000120,000
Deaths of children under 511,00023,00010,000
Internally displaced people~07.6 million7.3 million
International refugees22,0006.9 million6.4 million
GDP per capita$9,500$9,600$4,200
Share in extreme poverty0.50%17%17%
Share undernourished6.50%34%34%
The data illustrate several harsh realities: annual deaths from fighting spiked after 2011 with devastating loss of life, including among children, while total deaths from all causes rose. Millions of Syrians became internally displaced or refugees, GDP per capita plunged, and extreme poverty and undernourishment grew sharply.
Understanding the War’s Origins
The conflict began during the Arab Spring when peaceful protests were met with force by government security services. What followed was a fragmented civil war involving government forces, opposition groups, Kurdish militias, extremist factions, and international actors; including Russia, Iran, the U.S., Turkey, and others.
At its peak, organized violence devastated cities like Aleppo, Homs and Raqqa, and fracturing Syrian society. Hundreds of thousands were killed across combatants and civilians, and millions more were displaced internally and abroad, which remade the country’s demographics and burdened neighboring states.
Beyond the Battlefield: Economic and Social Impacts
The war’s impacts extend far beyond immediate conflict deaths. GDP per capita more than halved as economic activity collapsed amid destruction of infrastructure and displacement of workers. Extreme poverty (once rare in Syria) surged, while undernourishment became widespread.
This aligns with broader findings that violence imposes costs on societies far beyond direct combat, from lost productivity to health crises and long-term poverty.
What Happens Now?
Though large-scale warfare has diminished, Syria faces a fragile transition. Recent agreements between the central government and Kurdish forces aim to stabilize parts of the country, but humanitarian needs remain acute. Millions still depend on aid, and access to essential services is uneven.
Political fragmentation, economic collapse, and reconstruction needs—estimated in the hundreds of billions—mean recovery will be lengthy and uncertain, even as some areas see renewed governance and investment.
Mapped: Africa in 1914, When 90% of the Continent Was Colonized
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Africa in 1914, When 90% of the Continent Was Colonized
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Key Takeaways
This infographic map shows Africa in 1914, on the eve of World War I, when 90% of the continent was controlled by just seven European empires.
Many of today’s national borders took shape in this era, as European powers carved up the African continent amongst themselves.
While Germany ceded all of its African colonies at the conclusion of the war, all of the European empires would come to lose their own colonies in the decades to follow.
In just a few decades, European empires redrew the map of Africa.
In the span of roughly 40 years, European powers had carved up nearly the entire continent, transforming Africa into a patchwork of colonial territories administered from London, Paris, Berlin, Brussels, Lisbon, Rome, and Madrid.
This map captures that moment at its peak, on the eve of World War I, when imperial control stretched across almost the whole continent before the war began to unravel Europe’s overseas empires.
Many of Africa’s modern national borders trace directly back to this period, reflecting colonial-era agreements rather than preexisting cultural or political boundaries.
Data used here leverages diverse sources including UNESCO (1990), Eric Hobsbawm (1987), Henk Wesseling (1997), EBSCO (2023), and the Library of Congress.
The Scramble for Africa
European empires had been making incursions into Africa for centuries, as seen through the Dutch settlers who arrived in the Cape of Good Hope in 1652 and Napoleon Bonaparte’s Egyptian expedition in 1798.
However, the era of New Imperialism which began in the second half of the 19th century saw significantly more complex colonial efforts by the European great powers, especially the British, French, and Germans.
The “Scramble for Africa” saw these three great powers partition the African continent amongst themselves, with the process perhaps best represented by the 1885 Berlin Conference.
Some of the active colonial powers, such as Belgium or Portugal, were smaller countries without extensive military power, while some European great powers like Russia and Austria-Hungary did not participate in the Scramble for Africa.
A Tale of Two Colonies
The British Empire was the most successful of the European empires in Africa, ruling over nearly uninterrupted lands across the eastern half of the continent.
London’s dreams of a Cape to Cairo railway linking their dominions in Egypt and South Africa were dashed by geographic and political concerns, as the eastern Belgian Congo was inhospitable for railway construction while German East Africa was a possession of the leading British rival of the era.
Following the end of the Great War, the British would take control of the latter territory, in what is today the country of Tanzania, although economic concerns during the Great Depression led to the dreamed railway never coming to fruition.
While the British were dominant in eastern Africa, the Maghreb and much of West Africa fell under French control. There were of course nuances between cases: Algeria was annexed to the territory of metropolitan France, while Morocco and Tunisia were each protectorates ruled by leaders loyal to the French Empire.
Nor did Morocco remain solely French-administered, as a 1912 treaty gave Spain dominion over northern parts of the country, near the Straits of Gibraltar, as well as a southern component bordering its Spanish Sahara colony.
By this point in history, Spain, much like neighboring Portugal, was holding on to its final few colonies following major losses of control in the Americas in the preceding decades. The two Iberian countries’ lack of involvement in the world wars led to them keeping their African colonies longer than most other European states, with independence and decolonization only coming in the 1960s-1970s.
Belgium and the Independent States
Owing to great-power ambivalence over the Congo Basin, Belgium’s King Leopold was able to establish a single vast colony, far larger than his own country, over which to rule. Belgian Congo, with its vast rubber extraction, has been cited as one of the most brutal and damaging colonies within the continent.
Meanwhile, further north only two countries managed to avoid colonization during the Partition of Africa: Ethiopia and Liberia.
The former, also known as Abyssinia, successfully repelled Italian colonization during the prewar partition, although it was eventually occupied by Fascist Italy during the interwar period. Liberia, meanwhile, was founded by freed U.S. slaves and was never colonized, helping it become Africa’s longest-lasting independent state today.
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Is there any correlation between Roman emperors’ life spans and currency debasement? To learn more, check out this visualization on Voronoi.
Ranked: The Countries Most Dependent on Tourism (Share of GDP)
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Ranked: The Countries Most Dependent on Tourism (Share of GDP)
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
In Macao, international tourism accounts for 70.8% of GDP, the highest share in the world.
Eight of the top 10 most tourism-dependent economies are small island nations.
In contrast, tourism contributes less than 1% of GDP in 47 countries in the dataset.
Tourism is a major global industry, projected to contribute $11.7 trillion to global GDP in 2025, or roughly 10% of total economic output. But its importance varies dramatically by country.
For some nations, tourism is a supplementary source of income. For others, it represents the central pillar of economic activity.
The chart above ranks countries by tourism’s share of GDP, using international tourism receipts from UN Tourism and GDP data from the IMF.
Small Economies Lead the Ranking
Macao tops the list. Visitor spending totaled $32.4 billion, equal to 70.8% of its $45.8 billion economy.
Aruba follows at 69.7%, while the Maldives (68.1%) and Andorra (66.5%) also derive roughly two-thirds of their economic output from tourism. Saint Lucia ranks fifth, with tourism accounting for 53.8% of GDP.
RankCountryTourism Share of GDP (%)
1 Macao70.8
2 Aruba69.7
3 Maldives68.1
4 Andorra66.5
5 Saint Lucia53.8
6 Grenada48.1
7 Antigua and Barbuda47.8
8 Seychelles46.6
9 Bahamas35.0
10 Saint Kitts and Nevis32.9
11 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines26.9
12 Malta26.4
13 Belize25.5
14 Cabo Verde23.8
15 Lebanon23.6
16 Albania21.9
17 Fiji21.5
18 Samoa19.8
19 Montenegro19.8
20 Jamaica19.7
21 Gambia19.0
22 Tuvalu18.6
23 Croatia17.9
24 Jordan16.9
25 Dominica16.8
26 Mauritius15.4
27 Barbados14.8
28 Georgia14.5
29 San Marino14.3
30 Portugal11.5
31 Tonga11.2
32 El Salvador11.1
33 Cyprus10.8
34 Qatar10.7
35 Panama10.5
36 Armenia10.5
37 Micronesia10.3
38 Greece10.1
39 Iceland9.7
40 Bahrain9.0
41 Thailand8.8
42 Dominican Republic8.8
43 Sao Tome and Principe8.7
44 Cambodia8.5
45 Morocco8.3
46 United Arab Emirates8.2
47 Luxembourg7.2
48 Laos7.0
49 Bosnia and Herzegovina6.8
50 Kyrgyzstan6.7
51 Tunisia6.7
52 Comoros6.4
53 Bhutan6.4
54 Spain6.2
55 Palau6.1
56 Costa Rica5.9
57 Malaysia5.8
58 Türkiye5.8
59 Austria5.6
60 Hong Kong5.5
61 Estonia5.5
62 Moldova5.1
63 Slovenia5.0
64 Rwanda5.0
65 Hungary4.9
66 Egypt4.5
67 Vanuatu4.4
68 Singapore4.4
69 Tanzania4.3
70 Serbia4.3
71 Bulgaria4.2
72 North Macedonia3.8
73 Saudi Arabia3.7
74 New Zealand3.7
75 Oman3.5
76 South Sudan3.3
77 Myanmar3.3
78 Namibia3.3
79 Azerbaijan3.3
80 Ireland3.2
81 Sudan3.2
82 Timor-Leste3.2
83 Ethiopia3.1
84 Mongolia3.1
85 Solomon Islands3.1
86 Latvia3.1
87 Uzbekistan3.1
88 Australia3.0
89 Trinidad and Tobago2.9
90 Puerto Rico2.9
91 Zambia2.9
92 Czechia2.9
93 Uruguay2.8
94 Sri Lanka2.8
95 Switzerland2.8
96 France2.7
97 Denmark2.7
98 Madagascar2.6
99 Nicaragua2.6
100 Italy2.6
101 Uganda2.5
102 Philippines2.4
103 Colombia2.4
104 Guyana2.4
105 United Kingdom2.3
106 Lithuania2.3
107 Canada2.2
108 Eritrea2.2
109 Senegal2.1
110 Togo2.0
111 Botswana2.0
112 Finland2.0
113 Nepal2.0
114 Honduras2.0
115 Mexico2.0
116 Brunei Darussalam1.9
117 Bolivia1.9
118 Netherlands 1.9
119 Norway1.9
120 Poland1.8
121 Kuwait1.8
122 Sweden1.8
123 Paraguay1.8
124 Iraq1.7
125 South Africa1.7
126 Peru1.6
127 Kenya1.6
128 Romania1.6
129 Belgium1.6
130 Ghana1.5
131 Iran1.5
132 Guatemala1.5
133 Japan1.5
134 Ecuador1.4
135 Chile1.4
136 Slovakia1.3
137 Benin1.3
138 Indonesia1.3
139 Central African Republic1.2
140 Djibouti1.2
141 Mozambique1.2
142 South Korea1.2
143 Guinea-Bissau1.2
144 Cameroon1.0
145 Burkina Faso1.0
146 Belarus1.0
147 Kazakhstan1.0
148 Palestine1.0
149 India0.9
150 Suriname0.9
151 United States 0.9
152 Germany0.9
153 Chad0.9
154 Argentina0.8
155 Equatorial Guinea0.8
156 Mali0.8
157 Kiribati0.7
158 Tajikistan0.6
159 Ukraine0.6
160 Nauru0.6
161 Niger0.6
162 Haiti0.5
163 Côte d’Ivoire0.5
164 Eswatini0.5
165 Venezuela0.5
166 Israel0.5
167 Taiwan0.4
168 Lesotho0.4
169 Russia0.4
170 Afghanistan0.4
171 Yemen0.4
172 Zimbabwe0.4
173 Brazil0.3
174 DRC0.3
175 Pakistan0.3
176 Sierra Leone0.3
177 Marshall Islands0.2
178 Malawi0.2
179 China0.2
180 Gabon0.2
181 Libya0.2
182 Nigeria0.1
183 Liberia0.1
184 Bangladesh0.1
185 Algeria0.1
186 Congo0.1
187 Burundi0.1
188 Mauritania0.1
189 Vietnam0.0
190 Angola0.0
191 Guinea0.0
192 Papua New Guinea0.0
The broader pattern is clear: small island nations and resort-driven economies dominate the upper ranks. Limited domestic markets and fewer large-scale industries often make international visitors a primary source of foreign exchange and employment.
Diversified Economies Rank Lower
The U.S. ranks 151 on the list, and international tourism accounts for just 0.86% of its GDP despite receipts totaling $251.6 billion in absolute terms.
The country least reliant on tourism is Papua New Guinea, where tourism is responsible for just 0.01% of its economic output. Guinea and Angola trail closely behind at 0.02% of their respective $24.2 billion and $115.2 billion GDPs.
For 47 countries in the data set, tourism generated below 1% of their GDP.
Tourism Reliance Clusters around Backpacking Hotspots
Clusters with higher reliance are also visible around Central America, Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia, which are backpacking hotspots. These countries are considered affordable destinations.
While economic benefits are well documented, tourism-heavy economies are at particular risk to global shocks. Aruba’s real GDP, for instance, contracted 24% in 2020 when the pandemic grounded tourism to a halt, pushing business owners and citizens into economic precarity. It has since rebounded.
On the other hand, over-tourism can overwhelm locals and cause tension on the ground.
Learn More on the Voronoi App
To learn more about tourism, check out this graphic which charts where tourists outnumber locals.
Mapped: The Largest Immigrant Group in Every NYC Neighborhood
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Mapping NYC’s Largest Immigrant Communities by Neighborhood
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Key Takeaways
China is the largest immigrant group in 56 NYC neighborhoods, the most of any country.
The Dominican Republic leads in 52 neighborhoods and is the largest immigrant group citywide.
Caribbean, Latin American, and South Asian communities dominate large swaths of Queens and Brooklyn.
New York City is the largest city in the U.S., and home to immigrants from nearly every corner of the globe. But which country has the largest presence in your neighborhood?
This map reveals the top country of origin for foreign-born residents in all 211 NYC neighborhoods, using data from the Population FactFinder hosted by the city’s Department of City Planning
While China leads the most neighborhoods overall, the Dominican Republic is the largest immigrant group citywide. The result is a clear contrast between geographic spread and total population dominance.
From One Chinatown to Many in NYC
China is the top overseas birthplace for immigrants in 56 neighborhoods across New York, making it the most widespread of the immigrant groups in the city today.
The data table below shows the largest immigrant group of every major neighborhood in New York:
Neighborhood NameLargest Immigrant Group
Elmhurst China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Jackson Heights Colombia
Bensonhurst China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
South Ozone Park Guyana
Flushing-Willets Point China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Forest Hills China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Corona Ecuador
Canarsie Jamaica
Washington Heights (South) Dominican Republic
Jamaica Bangladesh
Murray Hill-Broadway Flushing China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Sheepshead Bay-Manhattan Beach-Gerritsen Beach Ukraine
Washington Heights (North) Dominican Republic
Gravesend (West) China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Ridgewood Ecuador
Flatbush Haiti
Woodside Mexico
Queens Village Guyana
Bay Ridge China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Flatlands Haiti
Coney Island-Sea Gate Ukraine
North Corona Ecuador
Concourse-Concourse Village Dominican Republic
Sunset Park (Central) China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Soundview-Bruckner-Bronx River Dominican Republic
Crown Heights (North) Jamaica
Gravesend (East)-Homecrest Russia
University Heights (South)-Morris Heights Dominican Republic
Upper East Side-Lenox Hill-Roosevelt Island China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Bedford Park Dominican Republic
St. Albans Jamaica
Sunnyside Ecuador
Far Rockaway-Bayswater Jamaica
Mount Eden-Claremont (West) Dominican Republic
Williamsbridge-Olinville Jamaica
Jamaica Hills-Briarwood Bangladesh
Mount Hope Dominican Republic
Woodhaven Dominican Republic
Brighton Beach Ukraine
Wakefield-Woodlawn Jamaica
East Flatbush-Erasmus Haiti
Hamilton Heights-Sugar Hill Dominican Republic
Midwood Ukraine
Upper West Side (Central) Mexico
East Flushing China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Harlem (North) Dominican Republic
Bushwick (East) Dominican Republic
East Flatbush-Rugby Jamaica
Bedford-Stuyvesant (East) Dominican Republic
Madison China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Eastchester-Edenwald-Baychester Jamaica
University Heights (North)-Fordham Dominican Republic
East New York-City Line Bangladesh
Baisley Park Guyana
Dyker Heights China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Chinatown-Two Bridges China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Cypress Hills Dominican Republic
Upper West Side-Lincoln Square China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Sunset Park (West) Mexico
South Jamaica Guyana
Crown Heights (South) Jamaica
Norwood Dominican Republic
East Flatbush-Farragut Haiti
Astoria (Central) Mexico
Hell's Kitchen China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
East Flatbush-Remsen Village Jamaica
Richmond Hill Guyana
Maspeth Poland
Sunset Park (East)-Borough Park (West) China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Upper East Side-Yorkville India
East Village China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
East New York-New Lots Jamaica
Flatbush (West)-Ditmas Park-Parkville Bangladesh
College Point China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Brownsville Jamaica
East Harlem (South) China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Williamsburg Dominican Republic
Bedford-Stuyvesant (West) Dominican Republic
Rego Park China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Chelsea-Hudson Yards China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Bath Beach China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Inwood Dominican Republic
Auburndale China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Astoria (North)-Ditmars-SteinwayGreece
Bushwick (West) Dominican Republic
Borough Park China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Prospect Lefferts Gardens-Wingate Jamaica
Fordham Heights Dominican Republic
South Richmond Hill Guyana
Astoria (East)-Woodside (North) Mexico
Mott Haven-Port Morris Dominican Republic
Murray Hill-Kips Bay India
Pomonok-Electchester-Hillcrest China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Bayside China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
East Elmhurst Ecuador
Gravesend (South) Ukraine
East New York (North) Dominican Republic
Kensington Bangladesh
Ozone Park (North) Bangladesh
Lower East Side China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
East Harlem (North) Dominican Republic
Kew Gardens Hills China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Kingsbridge Heights-Van Cortlandt Village Dominican Republic
Bellerose India
Jamaica Estates-Holliswood Bangladesh
Grasmere-Arrochar-South Beach-Dongan Hills China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
New Springville-Willowbrook-Bulls Head-Travis China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Middle Village Poland
Marine Park-Mill Basin-Bergen Beach Ukraine
Financial District-Battery Park City China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere Guyana
East Williamsburg China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Harlem (South) Dominican Republic
Allerton Dominican Republic
Castle Hill-Unionport Dominican Republic
Queensboro Hill China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Upper West Side-Manhattan Valley China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Belmont Dominican Republic
Glendale Ecuador
Springfield Gardens (North)-Rochdale Village Jamaica
Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill-Gowanus-Red Hook China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Ocean Hill Dominican Republic
Great Kills-Eltingville China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Hollis Guyana
Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills Bangladesh
Morningside Heights China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Parkchester Bangladesh
Upper East Side-Carnegie HillCanada
Long Island City-Hunters Point China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Rosedale Jamaica
Longwood Dominican Republic
Oakland Gardens-Hollis Hills China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Tremont Dominican Republic
Laurelton Jamaica
East Midtown-Turtle Bay China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Riverdale-Spuyten Duyvil Dominican Republic
Mapleton-Midwood (West) China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Greenpoint Poland
Glen Oaks-Floral Park-New Hyde Park India
Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville Jamaica
Downtown Brooklyn-DUMBO-Boerum Hill China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Melrose Dominican Republic
Fresh Meadows-Utopia China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Whitestone-Beechhurst China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Park Slope Taiwan
Highbridge Dominican Republic
Crotona Park East Dominican Republic
Pelham Gardens Dominican Republic
Ozone Park Bangladesh
Co-op City Jamaica
Throgs Neck-Schuylerville Dominican Republic
Morrisania Dominican Republic
Douglaston-Little Neck China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
New Dorp-Midland Beach China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Kew Gardens Russia
Mariner's Harbor-Arlington-Graniteville Mexico
Todt Hill-Emerson Hill-Lighthouse Hill-Manor Heights India
Soundview-Clason Point Dominican Republic
Pelham Parkway-Van Nest Dominican Republic
Rosebank-Shore Acres-Park Hill China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Kingsbridge-Marble Hill Dominican Republic
Cambria Heights Jamaica
Midtown-Times Square India
West New Brighton-Silver Lake-Grymes HillAlbania
Midtown South-Flatiron-Union Square China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Bay Terrace-Clearview China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Annadale-Huguenot-Prince's Bay-WoodrowItaly
Fort Greene China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Morris Park Dominican Republic
Manhattanville-West Harlem Dominican Republic
SoHo-Little Italy-Hudson Square China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Pelham Bay-Country Club-City Island Dominican Republic
Westchester Square Bangladesh
Arden Heights-Rossville China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Greenwich Village China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Port Richmond Mexico
Howard Beach-LindenwoodItaly
Westerleigh-Castleton Corners Mexico
West Village United Kingdom, excluding England and Scotland
Clinton Hill China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Stuyvesant Town-Peter Cooper Village China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Tompkinsville-Stapleton-Clifton-Fox Hills Mexico
West Farms Dominican Republic
Spring Creek-Starrett City Ukraine
Old Astoria-Hallets Point Dominican Republic
Tribeca-Civic Center China, excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan
Windsor Terrace-South Slope Mexico
Claremont Village-Claremont (East) Dominican Republic
St. George-New Brighton Mexico
Prospect HeightsCanada
South Williamsburg Dominican Republic
Gramercy India
Oakwood-Richmondtown Ukraine
Hunts Point Dominican Republic
Brooklyn Heights United Kingdom, excluding England and Scotland
Breezy Point-Belle Harbor-Rockaway Park-Broad ChannelIreland
Tottenville-Charleston Ukraine
Rikers Island Dominican Republic
Randall's Island Dominican Republic
Fort Hamilton Korea
Fort Wadsworth Mexico
Hutchinson Metro Center Ecuador
Alley Pond Park Israel
Holy Cross Cemetery Barbados
Miller Field Ecuador
Freshkills Park (South) Poland
Barren Island-Floyd Bennett Field Panama
Pelham Bay Park Trinidad and Tobago
Sunnyside Yards (North) Japan
Jacob Riis Park-Fort Tilden-Breezy Point Tip Germany
Bronx Park South Africa
Chinese New Yorkers are found across all five boroughs and in many cases congregate inside Chinatown enclaves where storefronts and restaurants in Mandarin and Cantonese are familiar sights.
While Manhattan’s Chinatown is the most famous in the city, and perhaps the world, today Queens is home to the largest Chinatown outside of Asia, in the neighborhood of Flushing.
Little Santo Domingo
However, ahead even of Chinese New Yorkers are their Dominican counterparts, which make up over 12% of the city’s population.
Despite the Dominican Republic being miniscule in size compared to giants like China or India, Dominicans are the largest immigrant group in New York. They also tend to be far more concentrated, with a vast majority residing in the Bronx and Upper Manhattan neighborhoods like Inwood, East Harlem, and Washington Heights.
Interestingly, the first ever permanent, non-indigenous resident of what is today New York City was actually born in the Spanish colony which would become the Dominican Republic. Juan Rodriguez, a trader of mixed European and African descent, arrived on Manhattan Island in 1613.
A Brand New Start of It, in Old New York
Beyond Chinese and Dominican New Yorkers, the city is home to millions of others, often with some borough-wide differences.
Queens has become home to thousands of Caribbean immigrants from countries like Jamaica and Guyana, while some neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Staten Island retain their old-world connections through sizable Italian, Polish, and Ukrainian populations.
Beyond the Dominicans, nearly a third of New Yorkers claim some sort of Latin American ancestry, with sizable populations in particular of Mexicans, Ecuadorians, and Colombians. South Asians like Bengalis and Indians are also well represented across all five boroughs.
Over 800 languages are spoken in New York today, and the city is known for its sizable ethnic enclaves in which large immigrant populations congregate.
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