photo: European Community / Marie-Angélique
La Défense, Paris is the heart of the French economy.
photo: Creative Commons / Rüdiger Wölk
Safrika IMG 8414
photo: Creative Commons / Husond
Ljubljana from the castle Slovenia has a high-income developed economy which enjoys the second highest GDP per capita of the new member states in the European Union, at $29,472 in 2008[6], or 90% of the EU average.
photo: Creative Commons / Yerpo
Ljubljana, the Economic and Administrative capital of Slovenia Slovenia has a high-income developed economy which enjoys the second highest GDP per capita of the new member states in the European Union, at $29,472 in 2008[6], or 90% of the EU average.
photo: Creative Commons / Xgeorg
Dallas
photo: Creative Commons / Fanghong
Downtown of Shijiazhuang city, the capital of Hebei Province, China Downtown Shijiazhuang. In 2008, Hebei's GDP was 1.62 trillion yuan (US$233 billion), an increase of 10.1% over the previous year and ranked 6th in the PRC. GDP per capita reached 23,239 Renminbi.
photo: Creative Commons / Sl-Ziga
Slovenian Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Ljubljana, the economic and administrative center of Slovenia.
photo: European Community / Mahlum
Kamppi Center is a shopping and transportation complex in the Kamppi district in the center of Helsinki.
photo: Creative Commons
A poster in Brussels welcoming Slovenia's accession to the Eurozone in 2007
photo: Creative Commons / Yaohua
Datong railway station the GDP per capita was ¥17,852 (US$2,570) per annum in 2008, ranked no. 242 among 659 Chinese cities. Coal mining is the dominant industry of Datong.Its history and development are very much linked to this commodity
photo: European Community / Marku
Bill Clinton Boulevard Prishtinë/Pristina Kosovo Kosovo is a developing country, with a per capita income estimated at €2,100 (2008).
photo: Creative Commons / Tommy Bee
Reykjavík Airport. Per capita car ownership in Iceland is among the highest in the world at roughly 522 vehicles per 1,000 residents[8], though Reykjavík is not severely affected by congestion. Wide multi-lane highways run all over the city connecting the different neighbourhoods and suburbs.
photo: Creative Commons / DocentX
Warsaw Downtown skyline
photo: Creative Commons / Doris Anton
Chu Tiantai Wuhan is a sub-provincial city. Its GDP was RMB 396 billion and GDP per capita was approximately RMB 44,000 (US$6,285) as of 2008.
photo: Creative Commons / Aude
Savannah's River Street is a popular destination among tourists visiting coastal Georgia.Georgia's 2007 total gross state product was $396 billion.[31] Its Per Capita personal income for 2007 puts it 37th in the nation at $33,499
photo: European Community / Roberto Fiadone
Gran Rex Cinema, Buenos Aires
photo: Creative Commons / Malepheasant
The Marion County Courthouse in Fairmont.The median income for a household in the city was $25,628, and the median income for a family was $37,126. Males had a median income of $27,944 versus $20,401 for females. The per capita income for the city was $16,062.
photo: Creative Commons / Tawker
West Vancouver Memorial Library.
photo: Creative Commons / Flickr upload bot
A classical Italian vineyard scene, with vines growing together with olive trees.
photo: Public Domain / Lovemykia
Welcome sign.
photo: Creative Commons / Dirkvd M
A coffee plantation in the Orosi Valley. According to the World Bank, Costa Rica's GDP per capita is US$11,240 PPP (as of 2008); however, this developing country still faces the fourth highest inflation rate in Latin America,
photo: Creative Commons / Liam Skoda
Adventure World
photo: Creative Commons / Komencanto
The Northern Territory's economy is largely driven by mining, which is concentrated on energy producing minerals, petroleum and energy and contributes around $2.5 billion to the gross state product and employs over 4,600 people. Mining accounts for 26 per cent of the gross state product in 2006 - 2007 compared to just 7 per cent nationally.[13]
photo: AP Photo / Bob Moen
** ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY JUNE 3 **The Laramie River Station coal-fired power plant, shown May 23, 2007, about 70 miles north of Cheyenne, Wyo., produces about 15 million tons of carbon dioxide a year, contributing to Wyoming's designation as the state with the most CO2 emissions per capita in the nation. (AP Photo/Bob Moen)hg3
photo: Xinhua photo
Flourishing Metropolis - Shanghai Kxinhua2u
photo: Creative Commons / Fanghong
Airport of Guilin, China. The GDP per capita was ¥15775 (ca. US$1910) in 2003, ranked no. 125 among 659 Chinese cities. Local industry: pharmaceutical goods, tires, machinery, fertilizer, silk, perfume, wine, tea, cinnamon, herbal medicine.
photo: Creative Commons / Flickr upload bot
Signs in Toronto's Chinatown, one of a large collection of neighbourhoods in Canada featuring businesses that are run by, and often cater to, recent immigrants.
photo: Creative Commons / Mehtavs
Textile Market Surti households have been declared the most prosperous in the country by the National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER) and Future Capital Research's Roopa Purushothaman in their latest study
photo: Creative Commons / Lange, Dorothea
Dust storm at Manzanar War Relocation Center. To describe the conditions in more detail, the Heart Mountain War Relocation Center in northwestern Wyoming was a barbed-wire-surrounded enclave with unpartitioned toilets, cots for beds, and a budget of 45 cents daily per capita for food rations
photo: Creative Commons / Flickr
The City of London is the world's largest financial centre.