World Statistics Pocketbook
Technical notes - Statistical sources
- References
Country
nomenclature
The geographical
designations and presentation of the material in this publication have been
adopted solely for the purpose of providing a convenient geographical basis for
the statistical series. Because of space limitations, the country or area names
used in the tables are generally the commonly employed short names in use in
the United Nations, the full names being used only when a short form is not
available. Countries or areas are listed in English alphabetical order.
Country notes
Netherlands Antilles: The
Symbols and
abbreviations
... |
Data not available |
– |
Magnitude zero |
< |
Magnitude not zero, but less than
half of the unit employed |
–< |
Magnitude not zero, but negative
and less than half of the unit employed |
000 |
Thousands |
°C |
Degrees Celsius |
°F |
Degrees Fahrenheit |
% |
Percentage |
60+ |
Aged sixty years and over |
. |
Decimal figures are always preceded
by a period (.) |
CFA |
Coopération
financière en Afrique centrale |
CIF |
Cost,
Insurance and Freight |
CO2 |
Carbon dioxide |
CPI |
Consumer price index |
f |
Females |
FOB |
Free on board |
GDP |
Gross domestic product |
GNI |
Gross national income |
ILO |
International Labour Organization
|
ISIC |
International Standard Industrial
Classification |
ISO |
International Organization for
Standardization |
km |
Kilometres |
m |
Males |
mt |
Metric tons |
UN |
United Nations |
UNESCO |
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization |
UNHCR |
Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees |
UNSD |
United Nations Statistics
Division |
US$ |
|
Notes on the indicators
Below are brief descriptions of the indicators
presented in the country profiles. The
terms are arranged in alphabetical order. Numbers in square brackets refer to
the primary sources of the data which are listed in the Statistical sources and
references section.
Agricultural production index: The indices
are calculated by the Laspeyres formula based on the sum of price-weighted
quantities of different agricultural commodities produced. The commodities covered in the computation of
indices of agricultural production are all crops and livestock products
originating in each country. Practically all products are covered, with the
main exception of fodder crops.
Production quantities of each commodity are weighted by the average
international commodity prices in the base period and summed for each year. To
obtain the index, the aggregate for a given year is divided by the average
aggregate for the base period 2004-2006. Indices are calculated without any
deductions for feed and seed and are referred to as “gross” by the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).
Source of the data: FAOSTAT database [2]
of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, available at http://faostat.fao.org/site/612/default.aspx
(23 February 2012 update).
Balance of payments is a statement summarizing the
economic transactions between the residents of a country and nonresidents
during a specific period, usually a year. It includes transactions in goods,
services, income, transfers and financial assets and liabilities. Generally,
the balance of payments is divided into two major components: the current
account and the capital and financial account.
The data on balance of payments presented in the World Statistics Pocketbook correspond to the current account
category. The current account is a
record of all transactions in the balance of payments covering the exports and imports
of goods and services, payments of income, and current transfers between
residents of a country and nonresidents.
Source of the data: International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics (IFS) database
[5], (last accessed 1 December 2011).
Capital city: The
designation of any specific city as a capital city is done solely on the basis
of the designation as reported by the country or area. The city can be the seat
of the government as determined by the country. Some countries designate more
than one city to be a capital city with a specific title function (e.g.,
administrative and/or legislative capital). The data refer to the year 2011.
Source of the data: The United Nations Population
Division, World Urbanization Prospects:
The 2011 Revision [12], available at http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/CD-ROM/WUP2011-F13-Capital_Cities.xls
(last accessed 24 April 2012).
CO2
emission estimates
represent the volume of CO2 (carbon dioxide) produced during the
combustion of solid, liquid, and gaseous fuels, and from gas flaring and the
manufacture of cement. Original data were converted to CO2 emissions
by using the conversion formula: 1 gram Carbon = 3.664 grams CO2, as
per http://cdiac.ornl.gov/pns/convert.html#3.
Source of the data: Global, Regional, and National Fossil-Fuel CO2 Emissions,
Contraceptive prevalence refers to the percentage of women married or in-union aged 15 to 49
who are currently using, or whose sexual partner is using at least one method
of contraception, regardless of the method used. Contraceptive methods include
modern methods such as sterilization, oral hormonal pills, intra-uterine
devices, condoms, injectables, implants, vaginal barrier methods and emergency
contraception and traditional methods such as the rhythm, withdrawal,
lactational amenorrhea method and folk methods. The data contain the most
recent estimates of contraceptive prevalence between the years 2006 and 2010.
Source of the data: The Social Indicators website of
the Demographic and Social Statistics Branch of the United Nations Statistics Division at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/Tables_Excel/table2d_Dec%202011.xls
[14] (December 2011 update).
CPI: Consumer price index measures changes over time in the general level of
prices of goods and services that a reference population acquires, uses or pays
for consumption. A consumer price index is estimated as a series of summary
measures of the period-to-period proportional change in the prices of a fixed
set of consumer goods and services of constant quantity and characteristics,
acquired, used or paid for by the reference population. Each summary measure is
constructed as a weighted average of a large number of elementary aggregate
indices. Each of the elementary aggregate indices is estimated using a sample
of prices for a defined set of goods and services obtained in, or by residents
of, a specific region from a given set of outlets or other sources of
consumption goods and services. Unless otherwise noted, the indices here generally
refer to “all items” and to the country as a whole.
Source of the data: LABORSTA Internet [4], an International Labour
Organization database, Table 7A: Consumer prices, general indices, at http://laborsta.ilo.org (last accessed 18 October 2011).
Currency refers to those notes and coins in
circulation that are commonly used to make payments. The official currency
names and the ISO currency codes are those officially in use, and may be subject
to change.
Source of the information: United Nations Treasury’s [21] website at http://www.un.org/Depts/treasury/ as of 1 November 2011.
Deaths by assault: The rates are the annual number of
deaths purposely inflicted by other persons, reported by sex for the year per
100 000 corresponding mid-year population. The data refer to the latest
available year between 2005 and 2008.
Source of the data: United
Nations Statistics Division’s Demographic
Yearbook 2008 [15], Table 20: Death and death rates by
cause and sex, classified under External causes, assaults. See also http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/dyb/dyb2008.htm.
Education: Female third-level students: The number of female students at the third-level of education is
expressed as a percentage of the total number of students (males and females)
at the same level in a given school year.
Third-level education is that which is provided at university, teachers’
college, higher professional school, and which requires, as a minimum condition
of admission, the successful completion of education at the second level, or
evidence of the attainment of an equivalent level of knowledge. Unless
otherwise indicated, the data refer to the latest available year between 2005
and 2011.
Source of the data: the website of the UNESCO
Institute of Statistics [8], Table 14: Tertiary indicators,
available at http://stats.uis.unesco.org/unesco/TableViewer/tableView.aspx?ReportId=167 (January 2012 release).
Education: Government expenditure (% of GDP): Unless otherwise indicated, the data refer to the latest available
year between 2005 and 2011. They show the trends in general government
expenditures for educational affairs and services at pre-primary, primary,
secondary and tertiary levels and subsidiary services to education, expressed
as a percentage of the gross domestic product.
Source of the data: the website of UNESCO Institute
for Statistics [8], Table 19: Finance indicators by ISCED
level, available at http://stats.uis.unesco.org/unesco/TableViewer/tableView.aspx?ReportId=172 (January 2012 release).
Education: Primary and secondary gross enrolment ratio is the total enrolment in first and second levels of education,
regardless of age, expressed as a percentage of the eligible official
school-age population corresponding to the same level of education in a given
school year. Education at the first level provides the basic elements of
education (e.g. at elementary school or primary school). Education at the
second level is provided at middle school, secondary school, high school,
teacher-training school at this level and schools of a vocational or technical
nature. Enrolment is at the beginning of the school or academic year. The gross enrolment ratio at the first and
second level should include all pupils whatever their ages, whereas the
population is limited to the range of official school ages. Therefore, for
countries with almost universal education among the school-age population, the
gross enrolment ratio will exceed 100 if the actual age distribution of pupils
extends beyond the official school ages. Unless otherwise indicated, the data
refer to the latest available year between 2005 and 2011.
Source of the data: The website of the UNESCO
Institute of Statistics [8], Table 5: Enrolment ratios
by ISCED level, available at http://stats.uis.unesco.org/unesco/TableViewer/tableView.aspx?ReportId=182
(January 2012 release).
Employment in agricultural and in industrial sectors: The “employed” comprise all
persons above a specified age who, during a specified brief period, either one
week or one day, were in "paid employment” or in "self-employment” as
defined below. "Persons in paid employment” comprise all persons in the following
categories: (a) "at work": persons who during the reference period
performed some work for wages, salary or related payments, in cash or in kind;
or (b) "with a job but not at work": persons who, having already
worked in their present job, were absent during the reference period and
continued to have a strong attachment to their job. "Persons in
self-employment” comprise all persons (a) "at work": persons who
during the reference period performed some work for profit or family gain, in
cash or in kind; or (b) "with an enterprise but not at work": persons
with an enterprise, which may be a business enterprise, a farm or a service
undertaking, who were temporarily not at work during the reference period for
any specific reason. Employers, own-account workers and members of producers'
co-operatives should be considered as in self-employment and should be
classified as "at work” or "not at work”, as the case may be. (See
ILO’s Current International
Recommendations on Labour Statistics). Unless
otherwise indicated, the data refer to the 15 years and over age group who
perform any work at all in the reference period, for pay or profit in industry
(mining, manufacturing, electricity, gas and water and construction) and in
agriculture. Agriculture comprises the
following divisions of the International Standard Industrial Classification of
All Economic Activities (ISIC), Rev. 4: crop and
animal production, hunting and related service activities, forestry and
lodging, and fishing and aquaculture. Data sources include the World Bank’s Core
Welfare Indicators Questionnaire, Eurostat’s European Labour Force Survey,
household income and expenditure surveys, household or labour force surveys,
living standards surveys, official estimates and population censuses. The most common source of the data shown is
the household or labour force survey; if other sources have been used they are
indicated with a footnote.
Source
of the data: The Key Indicators of the
Labour Market database [3], prepared by the International
Labour Organization (ILO), available at http://kilm.ilo.org/kilmnet/
(last accessed 10 November 2011).
Energy consumption
per capita: Data on consumption refers to
“apparent consumption”, which is derived from the formula “production + imports
- exports - bunkers +/- stock changes”.
Source of the data: The Energy Statistics database of the United
Nations Statistics Division (last accessed 24 April 2012) and the Energy Statistics Yearbook [16].
Energy production, primary, refers to
the first stage of production of various forms of energy (from sources that
involve only extraction or capture, with or without separation from contiguous
material, cleaning or grading, before the energy embodied
in that source can be converted into heat or mechanical work, converted into a
common unit (metric ton of oil equivalent) (see United Nations publication Concepts and Methods in Energy Statistics,
with Special Reference to Energy Accounts and Balances, 1982). The data refer to the
following commercial primary energy sources:
hard coal, lignite, peat, oil shale, crude petroleum, natural gas
liquids, biodiesel, alcohol, natural gas, primary steam/heat, and electricity generated
from hydro, nuclear, geothermal, wind, tide, wave and solar sources.
Source of the data: The Energy Statistics
database of the United Nations Statistics Division (last accessed 24 April 2012) and
the Energy Statistics Yearbook [16].
Exchange rates are shown in units of national
currency per US dollar and refer to end-of-period quotations. The exchange
rates are classified into broad categories, reflecting both the role of the
authorities in the determination of the exchange and/or the multiplicity of
exchange rates in a country. The market rate is used to describe exchange rates
determined largely by market forces; the official rate is an exchange rate
determined by the authorities, sometimes in a flexible manner. For countries
maintaining multiple exchange arrangements, the rates are labelled principal
rate, secondary rate, and tertiary rate.
Source of the data: The International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics [5] database (last accessed 1 December 2011). For those currencies for
which the IMF does not publish exchange rates, non-commercial rates derived
from the operational rates of exchange for United Nations programmes are shown,
as published by the United Nations Treasury [21] at http://www.un.org/Depts/treasury/.
Fertility rate: The total fertility rate is a
widely used summary indicator of fertility. It refers to the number of children
that would be born per woman, assuming no female mortality at child bearing
ages and the age-specific fertility rates of a specified country and reference
period. Unless otherwise indicated, the data are the five-year average for the reference period 2010-2015.
Source of the data: The Social Indicators website of
the Demographic and Social Statistics Branch of the United Nations Statistics Division at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/Tables_Excel/table2c_Dec%202011.xls
[14] (December 2011 update).
Food production index covers commodities that are
considered edible and contain nutrients.
Accordingly, coffee and tea are excluded because they have practically
no nutritive value. The index numbers
shown may differ from those produced by countries themselves because of
differences in concepts of production, coverage, weights, time reference of
data, and methods of evaluation. The data include estimates made by FAO in
cases where no official or semi-official figures are available from the
countries.
Source of the data: FAOSTAT
database [2] of the Food
and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, available at http://faostat.fao.org/site/612/default.aspx (23 February
2012 update).
Forested area refers to the percentage of land
area occupied by forest.
Source of the data: The FAOSTAT database [2]
of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, available at http://faostat.fao.org/ (last updated 21
July 2011).
GDP: Gross domestic product is an aggregate measure of production equal to the sum of
gross value added of all resident producer units plus that part (possibly the
total) of taxes on products, less subsidies on products, that is not included
in the valuation of output. It is also
equal to the sum of the final uses of goods and services (all uses except
intermediate consumption) measured at purchasers’ prices, less the value of
imports of goods and services, and equal to the sum of primary incomes
distributed by resident producer units (see System of National
Accounts 2008). The data in the World Statistics Pocketbook are in
current United States (US) dollars and are estimates of the total production of
goods and services of the countries represented in economic terms, not as a
measure of the standard of living of their inhabitants. In order to have
comparable coverage for as many countries as possible, these US dollar
estimates are based on official GDP data in national currency, supplemented by
national currency estimates prepared by the Statistics Division using
additional data from national and international sources. The estimates given
here are in most cases those accepted by the United Nations General Assembly’s
Committee on Contributions for determining United Nations members’
contributions to the United Nations regular budget. The exchange rates for the
conversion of GDP national currency data into US dollars are the average market
rates published by the International
Monetary Fund, in International
Financial Statistics [5].
Official exchange rates are used only when free market rates are not available.
For non-members of the Fund, the conversion rates used are the average of
United Nations operational rates of exchange. It should be noted that the
conversion from local currency into US dollars introduces deficiencies in
comparability over time and among countries which should be considered when
using the data. For example, comparability over time is distorted when exchange
rate fluctuations differ substantially from domestic inflation rates.
Source of the data: The National Accounts Main Aggregates Database available at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/snaama/dnllist.asp
(December 2011 update) and the National Accounts Statistics: Analysis of
Main Aggregates [19],
compiled from national data provided to the United Nations Statistics Division.
GDP: Growth rate at constant 2005 prices is derived on the basis of constant price series in national currency.
The figures are computed as the geometric mean of annual rates of growth expressed
in percentages for the years indicated.
Source of the data: The National Accounts Main Aggregates Database available at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/snaama/dnllist.asp
(December 2011 update) and the National Accounts Statistics: Analysis of
Main Aggregates [19],
compiled from national data provided to the United Nations Statistics Division.
GDP per capita estimates are the value of all
goods and services produced in the economy divided by the population.
Source of the data: The National Accounts Main Aggregates Database available at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/snaama/dnllist.asp
(December 2011 update) and the National Accounts Statistics: Analysis of
Main Aggregates [19],
compiled from national data provided to the United Nations Statistics Division.
GNI: Gross national income per capita estimates are the aggregate value of the balances of gross primary
incomes for all sectors in the economy divided by the population. GNI is equal
to GDP less primary incomes payable to non-resident units plus primary incomes
receivable from non-resident units. In
other words, GNI is equal to GDP less taxes (less subsidies) on production and
imports, compensation of employees and property income payable to the rest of
the world plus the corresponding items receivable from the rest of the
world. Thus GNI at market prices is the sum
of gross primary incomes receivable by resident institutional
units/sectors. It is worth noting that
GNI at market prices was called gross national product in the 1953 SNA, and it
was commonly denominated GNP. In
contrast to GDP, GNI is not a concept of value added, but a concept of income
(see System of National Accounts 2008).
Source of the data: The National Accounts Main Aggregates Database available at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/snaama/dnllist.asp (December 2011 update) and the National
Accounts Statistics: Analysis of Main Aggregates [19], compiled from national data
provided to the United Nations Statistics Division.
Gross fixed capital formation is measured by the total value of a producer’s acquisitions, less
disposals, of fixed assets during the accounting period plus certain specified
expenditure on services that adds to the value of non-produced assets (see System of National Accounts 2008). The data are based on the percentage
distribution of GDP in current prices.
Source of the data: The National Accounts Main Aggregates Database available at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/snaama/dnllist.asp
(December 2011 update) and the National Accounts Statistics: Analysis of
Main Aggregates [19],
compiled from national data provided to the United Nations Statistics Division.
Industrial production index: The
data shown here generally cover, unless otherwise noted, the International
Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities, Revision 4 (ISIC
Rev. 4) sections B, C, D and E (i.e., mining and quarrying; manufacturing;
electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply; and water supply,
sewerage, waste management and remediation activities). The data that are
footnoted as referring to ISIC Rev. 3 cover Tabulation Categories C, D and E
(mining and quarrying; manufacturing; and electricity, gas and water supply).
Source of the data: Table 5 of the United Nations Monthly Bulletin of Statistics [18], available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/mbs/
(last accessed 10 November 2011).
Infant mortality rate (per
1 000 live births) is the ratio of infant deaths (the deaths of children under
one year of age) in a given year to the total number of live births in the same
year. Unless otherwise noted, the rates
are the five-year projected averages for the reference period 2010-2015.
Source of the data: The Social
Indicators website of the Demographic and Social Statistics Branch of the
United Nations Statistics Division at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/Tables_Excel/table2b_Dec%202011.xls
[14] (December 2011 update).
International migrant stock generally
represents the number of persons born in a country other than that in which
they live. When information on country of birth was not recorded, data on the
number of persons having foreign citizenship was used instead. In the absence
of any empirical data, estimates were imputed. Data refer to mid-2010. Figures for international migrant stock as a
percentage of the population are the outcome of dividing the estimated
international migrant stock by the estimated total population and multiplying
the result by 100.
Source of the data:
The United Nations Population Division, Trends in International Migrant Stock: The 2008 Revision [10] available at http://esa.un.org/migration/.
Estimates of total population are obtained from the United Nations Population
Division, World Population Prospects: The
2008 Revision available at http://www.unpopulation.org
and include information received by UNSD as of 16 October 2009.
Internet users per 100 inhabitants are based on nationally reported data for users divided by the total
population and then multiplied by 100. There are variations in data collection
among countries: some use surveys that give a more precise figure for the
number of Internet users, while others base their estimates on derivations from
reported Internet Service Provider subscriber counts, calculated by multiplying
the number of subscribers by a multiplier. Surveys may differ across countries
in the user age and frequency of use they cover. Some figures may refer to only
users above a certain age.
Source of the data: The World Telecommunication/ICT
Indicators Database 2011 (15th Edition) of the International
Telecommunication Union [7], available at http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/publications/world/world.html
(last accessed 15 December 2011).
Labour force participation rate is
calculated by expressing the number of persons in the labour force as a
percentage of the working-age population. The labour force is the sum of the
number of persons employed and the number of unemployed (see ILO’s Current International Recommendations on
Labour Statistics). The working-age
population is the population above a certain age, prescribed for the
measurement of economic characteristics. Unless otherwise noted, the data refer
to the age group of 15 years and over.
Source of the data:
The Key Indicators of the Labour Market database [3],
produced by the International Labour Organization, available at http://kilm.ilo.org/kilmnet/
(last accessed 18 October 2011).
Life expectancy at birth is the average number of years of
life at birth (age 0) according to the expected mortality rates by age
estimated for the reference year and population. Unless otherwise indicated, the data are the
five-year projected averages for the reference period 2010-2015.
Source of the data: The Social
Indicators website of the Demographic and Social Statistics Branch of the
United Nations Statistics Division at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/Tables_Excel/table2a_Dec%202011.xls
[14] (December 2011 update).
Major trading partners shows the three largest trade
partners (countries of destination and origin) in international merchandise
trade transactions. In some cases, less than three countries may be shown, for
example when one or more of the largest shares of exports and/or imports refer
to regions or unspecified areas rather than to individual countries. Data are
expressed as percentages of total exports and of total imports of the country
or area.
Source of the data: The United Nations Statistics
Division’s Commodity Trade Statistics Database [13]
(COMTRADE, see http://comtrade.un.org)
and the United Nations International
Trade Statistics Yearbook [17].
Population aged 0-14 years refers to the
population aged 0-14 years of both sexes as a percentage of total population.
Unless otherwise indicated, the data refer to the year 2011.
Source of the data: The Social Indicators website of the Demographic and Social Statistics
Branch of the United Nations Statistics
Division at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/Tables_Excel/table1b_Dec%202011.xls [14] (December 2011 update).
Population aged 60 years and over refers to elderly men as a percentage of all males and elderly women
as a percentage of all females. Unless otherwise indicated, the data refer to the year
2011.
Source of the data: The Social Indicators website of
the Demographic and Social Statistics Branch of the United Nations Statistics Division at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/Tables_Excel/table1b_Dec%202011.xls
[14] (December 2011 update).
Population density refers to population per square
kilometre of surface area. Data are derived from the population estimates for
2010 divided by the surface area. See also population
estimates and surface area.
Population estimates:
Data for “Population in 2010” refer to de facto population as of 1 July 2010.
The total population of a country may comprise either all usual residents of
the country (de jure population) or all persons present in the country (de
facto population) at the time of the census; for purposes of international
comparisons, the de facto definition is recommended.
Source of the data: Estimates for 2010 were prepared
by the United Nations Population Division and published in the World Population Prospects: The 2010
Revision [11], available at http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/index.htm.
Population growth rate is the average annual percentage
change in total population size. Unless otherwise indicated, the data refer to the period 2010-2015.
Source of the data: The Social Indicators website of the Demographic and Social Statistics
Branch of the United Nations Statistics
Division at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/Tables_Excel/table1c_Dec%202011.xls [14] (December 2011 update).
Rainfall in the capital city, total mean data are computed by adding average monthly measurements from the
weather stations in the capital city, unless otherwise noted. The data are
official climatological information supplied by national meteorological and
hydrological services. Since the
definition of mean rainfall and averaging periods may be different for
different countries, care should be taken when comparing city climatologies.
Source of the data: The World Meteorological
Organization website [25], available at http://www.worldweather.org/ (last
accessed 13 January 2011).
Refugees and others of concern to the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR): The 1951
United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees spells out that a
refugee is someone who, owing to a
well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion,
nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group, is
outside the country of his or her nationality and is unable to, or owing to
such fear, is unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protection of that
country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his
or her former habitual residence, is unable or, owing to such fear, unwilling
to return to it. In this series, refugees refer to persons granted a
humanitarian status and/or those granted temporary protection. Included are
persons who have been granted temporary protection on a group basis. The series
also includes returned refugees, asylum-seekers and persons displaced
internally within their own country for reasons that would make them of concern
to the UNHCR if they were outside their country of origin.
Source of the data: The UNHCR Global Trends 2010, Table 1: Refugees, asylum-seekers,
internally displaced persons (IDPs), returnees (refugees and IDPs), stateless
persons, and others of concern to UNHCR by country/territory of asylum,
end-2010 [9], available at http://www.unhcr.org/statistics.html
(Annexes, last accessed 7 July 2011).
Region: Macro geographical regions arranged
according to continents and component geographical regions used for statistical
purposes.
Source of the data: The Standard Country or Area Codes and Geographical Regions for Statistical
Use, Revision 4 (United Nations publication) [20], available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/m49/m49.htm.
Rural population growth rate data are based
on the number of persons defined as rural according to national definitions of
this concept. In most cases these definitions are those used in the most recent
population census.
Source of the data: The United Nations Population
Division, World Urbanization Prospects:
The 2011 Revision [12] available at http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/CD-ROM/Urban-Rural-Population.htm
(last accessed 24 April 2012).
Seats held by women in national parliaments refer to the number of women in
the lower chamber of national parliaments expressed as a percentage of total
occupied seats in the lower or single House.
Source of the data:
The Inter-Parliamentary Union [6], Women in National Parliaments,
Situation as of 30 November 2011, available at http://www.ipu.org/wmn-e/classif.htm.
Sex ratio is calculated as the ratio of the
number of men to that of 100 women. Unless otherwise indicated, the data refer
to the year 2011.
Source of the data: The Social Indicators website of
the Demographic and Social Statistics Branch of the United Nations Statistics Division at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/Tables_Excel/table1a_Dec%202011.xls
[14] (December 2011 update).
Surface area, unless otherwise noted, refers to
land area plus inland water.
Source of the data: The United Nations Demographic Yearbook 2009-2010 [15], Table 3, available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/dyb/dyb2009-2010/Table03.xls
(last accessed 22 November 2011).
Telephone subscribers, total per 100 inhabitants refer to
the sum of main telephone lines and cellular mobile subscribers divided by the
population and multiplied by 100.
Source of the data: The World Telecommunication/ICT
Indicators Database 2011 (15th Edition) of the International
Telecommunication Union [7], available at http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/publications/world/world.html
(last accessed 15 December 2011).
Temperature in the capital city, mean °C (minimum and maximum): Data were computed from average monthly
measurements from the weather stations in the capital city, unless otherwise
noted. The data are official climatological information supplied by national
meteorological and hydrological services worldwide. Since the definition of
mean temperature and averaging periods may be different for different
countries, care should be taken when comparing city climatologies.
Source of the data: The World Meteorological
Organization website [25], available at http://www.worldweather.org/ (last
accessed 13 January 2011).
Threatened species represents the number of plants
and animals that are most in need of conservation attention and are compiled by
the World Conservation Union IUCN/ Species Survival Commission (SSC).
Source of the data: The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species [24] version 2011.2:
Table 5, available at www.iucnredlist.org (last accessed 11
November 2011).
Total trade: exports
and imports show the movement of goods out of and into a country. Goods simply
being transported through a country (goods in transit) or temporarily admitted
(except for goods for inward processing) do not add to the stock of material
resources of a country and are not included in the international merchandise
trade statistics. In the “general trade system”, the definition of the
statistical territory of a country coincides with its economic territory. In
the “special trade system”, the definition of the statistical territory
comprises only a particular part of the economic territory, mainly that part
which coincides with the free circulation area for goods. “The free circulation
area” is a part of the economic territory of a country within which goods “may
be disposed of without Customs restrictions”. In the case of exports, the
transaction value is the value at which the goods were sold by the exporter,
including the cost of transportation and insurance, to bring the goods onto the
transporting vehicle at the frontier of the exporting country (an FOB-type
valuation). In the case of imports, the transaction value is the value at which
the goods were purchased by the importer plus the cost of transportation and
insurance to the frontier of the importing country (a CIF-type valuation). Both
imports and exports are shown in
Source of the data: The United Nations Statistics
Division’s Commodity Trade Statistics Database [13]
(Comtrade, see http://comtrade.un.org)
and the United Nations International
Trade Statistics Yearbook [17].
Tourist arrivals at national borders: An international tourist is any person who travels to a country other
than that in which he or she has his or her usual residence but outside his/her
usual environment for a period not exceeding 12 months and whose main purpose
of visit is other than the exercise of an activity remunerated from with the
country visited, and who stays at least one night in a collective or private
accommodation in the country visited (see Recommendations
on Tourism Statistics of the United Nations and the World Tourism
Organization).
Unless otherwise indicated, the data refer to arrivals of non-resident tourists
at national borders.
Source of the data: The United Nations World Tourism
Organization Yearbook of Tourism
Statistics [23]
(information received by UNSD as of 12 January 2012).
Unemployment refers to persons above a
specified age who during a specified reference period were: “without work”,
i.e. were not in paid employment or self-employment as defined under
employment; “currently available for work”, i.e. were available for paid
employment or self-employment during the reference period; and “seeking work”,
i.e. had taken specific steps in a specified recent period to seek paid
employment or self-employment. In circumstances where employment opportunities
are particularly limited and where persons not working do not have easy access
to formal channels for seeking employment or face social and cultural barriers
when looking for a job, the “seeking work” criterion should be relaxed.
National definitions of unemployment often differ from the recommended
international standard definitions and thereby limit international
comparability. Inter-country comparisons are also complicated by the different
types of data collection systems used to obtain information on unemployed
persons. Unless
otherwise indicated, the data refer to the 15 years and over age group and are
national employment office statistics,
usually labour force surveys, compiled by the ILO. (See ILO’s Current International Recommendations on
Labour Statistics, 2000 Edition).
Source of the data: The LABORSTA Internet [4] an ILO database, Short term indicators of the labour market,
Main dataset, available at http://laborsta.ilo.org/sti/sti_E.html
(last updated 29 February 2012).
United Nations membership dates: The United
Nations is an intergovernmental organization whose members are the countries of
the world. Currently there are 192 Member States of the United Nations, some of
which joined the UN by signing and ratifying the Charter of the United Nations in 1945; the
other countries joined the UN later, through the adoption of a resolution
admitting them to membership. The process usually follows these steps: first,
the country applies for membership and makes a declaration accepting the
obligations of the Charter; second, the Security Council adopts a resolution
recommending that the General Assembly admit the country to membership and
finally the General Assembly adopts a resolution admitting the country.
Source of the data: The List of Member States,
available at http://www.un.org/en/members/
[22].
Urban population and urban population growth rate series are based on the number of
persons defined as urban according to national definitions of this concept. In
most cases these definitions are those used in the most recent population
census.
Source of the data: The United Nations Population
Division, World Urbanization Prospects:
The 2011 Revision [12] available at http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/index.htm
(last accessed 24 April 2012).
[1]
[2]
Food and Agriculture Organization of
the United Nations, FAOSTAT database, available at http://faostat.fao.org/.
[3]
International Labour Organization, Key Indicators of the Labour Market, 7th
edition software, available at http://kilm.ilo.org/kilmnet/.
[4]
__________, LABORSTA Internet
database, available at http://laborsta.ilo.org/.
[5]
International Monetary Fund (IMF),
Washington, International Financial Statistics (IFS) database.
[6]
Inter-Parliamentary
[7]
International Telecommunication
Union (ITU),
[8]
United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Institute for Statistics,
[9]
United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees, 2010 Global Trends, available at http://www.unhcr.org/statistics.html.
[10] United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population
Division, Trends in International Migrant
Stock: The 2008 Revision (United Nations database, POP/DB/MIG/Stock/Rev.2008),
available at http://esa.un.org/migration/.
[11] __________, World Population Prospects. The 2010 Revision,
[12]
__________,
World Urbanization Prospects: The 2011
Revision available at http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/index.htm.
[13] United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics
Division, Commodity Trade Statistics Database (COMTRADE), available at http://comtrade.un.org/db/default.aspx.
[14] __________, Demographic and Social Statistics, Social Indicators
website: http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/socind/default.htm
[15] __________, Demographic Yearbook
(Series R, United Nations publication). See also http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/dyb/dyb2.htm.
[16] __________, Energy Statistics
Yearbook (Series J, United Nations publication).
[17] __________, International Trade
Statistics Yearbook (Series G, United Nations publication).
[18] __________, Monthly Bulletin of
Statistics (Series Q, United Nations
publication). See also http://unstats.un.org/unsd/mbs/.
[19] __________, National Accounts
Statistics: Analysis of Main Aggregates (Series X, United Nations
publication). See also http://unstats.un.org/unsd/snaama/introduction.asp.
[20]
__________,
Standard Country or Area Codes for
Statistical Use (ST/ESA/STAT/SER.M/49/Rev.4),
[21] United Nations, Department of Management, Office of Programme Planning,
Budget and Accounts, Treasury website: http://www.un.org/Depts/treasury.
[22] United Nations Member States website: http://www.un.org/en/members/.
[23] United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO),
[24] World Conservation Union, The
2011 Review of the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, available at http://www.iucnredlist.org/.
[25]
World Meteorological Organization,
at http://www.worldweather.org/.
Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (2010),
International Labour Organization (2000). Current International Recommendations on
Labour Statistics, 2000 Edition (
United Nations (1982). Concepts
and Methods in Energy Statistics, with Special Reference to Energy Accounts and
Balances: A Technical Report. Statistical Office, Series F, No. 29 and
Corr. 1 (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.82.XVII.13 and corrigendum),
available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/publication/SeriesF/SeriesF_29E.pdf.
United Nations (2008). Principles
and Recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses Rev. 2. Statistics
Division, Series M, No. 67, Rev. 2 (United Nations publication, Sales No.
E.07.XVII.8), available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/publication/SeriesM/Seriesm_67rev2e.pdf.
United Nations (2008). International Standard Industrial Classification of
All Economic Activities (ISIC), Rev. 4. Statistics
Division, Series M, No. 4, Rev.4 (United Nations publication, Sales No.
E.08.XVII.25), available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/publication/SeriesM/seriesm_4rev4e.pdf.
United Nations (2004).
International Merchandise Trade Statistics: Compilers Manual, Statistics
Division, Series F, No. 87 (United
Nations publication, Sales No. E.02.XVII.17), available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/publication/SeriesF/seriesf_87e.pdf.
United Nations (2010).International Merchandise Trade
Statistics: Concepts and Definitions, Statistics Division, Series M, No.52,
Rev.3, (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.10.XVII.13), available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/trade/EG-IMTS/IMTS%202010%20(English).pdf.
United Nations, European Commission, International Monetary
Fund, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and World Bank
(2009). System of National Accounts 2008
(SNA 2008), available at http://unstats.un.org/unsd/nationalaccount/sna2008.asp.
United Nations and World Tourism Organization (2008). International Recommendations for Tourism Statistics
2008, Series M, No. 83/Rev.1 (United Nations publication, Sales No.
E.08.XVII.28).
World Health Organization (WHO, 2007). International Statistical
Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision
(ICD-10), (