20-jährige Schwankungen des Pro-Kopf-BIP 2003–2023 in Italien

Von Aggressive_Owl4802

2 Comments

  1. Aggressive_Owl4802 on

    The GDP per capita by province variation between 2003 and 2023 in Italy doesn’t show the famous Italian north-south gap (which is still largely there in absolute value).

    For example, all Piedmont region and most of Lombardy provinces (both North-west) worsen their position in 20 years compared to the national average, while surprisingly southern regions like Puglia and Basilicata improved all their positions compared to the national average (although remaining low in absolute value, first Bari in 75th place). Ups and downs in the rest of Italy.

    In the last 20 years, the one that has grown the most in terms of positions is Trieste (North-east), the most dropped are Pavia and Varese (both Lombardy region).
    Among the top, Rome falls from 2nd place in 2003 to 9th in 2023, Brescia falls from 9th to 15th, Modena grows from 11th to 7th as the only new entry in the top 10, Parma rises from 8th to 4th, Bologna grows from 5th to 3rd.

    As for GDP per capita in absolute value by Italian province in 2023, top 10 is: Milan, Bolzano, Bologna, Parma, Aosta, Trento, Modena, Florence, Rome, Trieste. Latest Agrigento and Cosenza.

    Source Unioncamere & Istituto Tagliacarne: [https://www.tagliacarne.it/files/241118/18112024com_valoreaggiunto_def_1.pdf](https://www.tagliacarne.it/files/241118/18112024com_valoreaggiunto_def_1.pdf)

  2. TechnicalyNotRobot on

    Sp what you’re saying is it’s been a wonderful 20 years to be Tuscan or Genoese?

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