Papua Nova Guiné

  • Governador Geral:Bob Dadae
  • Primeiro Ministro:James Marape
  • Capital:Port Moresby
  • Línguas:Tok Pisin (official), English (official), Hiri Motu (official), some 836 indigenous languages spoken (about 12% of the world's total); most languages have fewer than 1,000 speakers note: Tok Pisin, a creole language, is widely used and understood; English is spoken by 1%-2%; Hiri Motu is spoken by less than 2%
  • Governo:No data
  • Estatísticas Nacionais Oficias
  • População, pessoas:10.423.036 (2024)
  • Área, km2:452.860
  • PIB per capita, US$:3.116 (2022)
  • PIB, bilhões em US$ atuais:31,6 (2022)
  • Índice de GINI:41,9 (2009)
  • Facilidade para Fazer Negócios:120

Todos os conjuntos de dados: C F L P T U W
  • C
    • junho 2024
      Fonte: International Monetary Fund
      Carregamento por: Knoema
      Acesso em 07 junho, 2024
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      Data cited at: Consumer price indexes, The International Monetary Fund Consumer price indexes (CPIs) are index numbers that measure changes in the prices of goods and services purchased or otherwise acquired by households, which households use directly, or indirectly, to satisfy their own needs and wants. In practice, most CPIs are calculated as weighted averages of the percentage price changes for a specified set, or ‘‘basket’’, of consumer products, the weights reflecting their relative importance in household consumption in some period. CPIs are widely used to index pensions and social security benefits. CPIs are also used to index other payments, such as interest payments or rents, or the prices of bonds. CPIs are also commonly used as a proxy for the general rate of inflation, even though they measure only consumer inflation. They are used by some governments or central banks to set inflation targets for purposes of monetary policy. The price data collected for CPI purposes can also be used to compile other indices, such as the price indices used to deflate household consumption expenditures in national accounts, or the purchasing power parities used to compare real levels of consumption in different countries.
  • F
  • L
  • P
    • abril 2024
      Fonte: World Bank
      Carregamento por: Knoema
      Acesso em 23 abril, 2024
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      The World Bank updated the global poverty lines in September 2022. The Poverty data are now expressed in 2017 Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) prices, versus 2011 PPP in previous editions. The new global poverty lines of $2.15, $3.65, and $6.85 reflect the typical national poverty lines of low-income, lower-middle-income, and upper-middle-income countries in 2017 prices.
  • T
  • U
  • W
    • janeiro 2024
      Fonte: World Bank
      Carregamento por: Knoema
      Acesso em 12 janeiro, 2024
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      Global growth is projected to slow to its third-weakest pace in nearly three decades, overshadowed only by the 2009 and 2020 global recessions. Investment growth in emerging market and developing economies is predicted to remain below its average rate of the past two decades. In his Foreword, World Bank Group President David Malpass emphasizes that the crisis facing development is intensifying. The latest growth forecasts indicate a sharp, long-lasting slowdown and the deterioration is broad-based: in virually all regions of the world, per-captia income growth will be slower than it was during the decade before Covid-19.
    • janeiro 2024
      Fonte: United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs
      Carregamento por: Knoema
      Acesso em 18 janeiro, 2024
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      Note: World Economic Situation and Prospects, 2021 update available here: https://knoema.com/WESP2021/