Domestic credit to private sector (% of GDP) - Country Ranking

Definition: Domestic credit to private sector refers to financial resources provided to the private sector by financial corporations, such as through loans, purchases of nonequity securities, and trade credits and other accounts receivable, that establish a claim for repayment. For some countries these claims include credit to public enterprises. The financial corporations include monetary authorities and deposit money banks, as well as other financial corporations where data are available (including corporations that do not accept transferable deposits but do incur such liabilities as time and savings deposits). Examples of other financial corporations are finance and leasing companies, money lenders, insurance corporations, pension funds, and foreign exchange companies.

Source: International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics and data files, and World Bank and OECD GDP estimates.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Macao SAR, China 266.61 2020
2 Hong Kong SAR, China 258.43 2020
3 United States 215.95 2020
4 Japan 192.10 2020
5 China 182.43 2020
6 Switzerland 168.50 2016
7 Norway 165.99 2020
8 Korea 164.78 2020
9 Denmark 163.33 2020
10 New Zealand 161.28 2020
11 Thailand 159.78 2020
12 Vietnam 147.67 2020
13 United Kingdom 143.68 2020
14 Australia 142.29 2020
15 Cambodia 139.94 2020
16 Qatar 138.86 2020
17 Malaysia 134.00 2020
18 Singapore 132.68 2020
19 Sweden 131.87 2018
20 Chile 124.47 2020
21 Canada 124.10 2008
22 France 122.45 2020
23 Fiji 120.55 2020
24 Cyprus 110.59 2020
25 Spain 108.52 2020
26 South Africa 107.88 2020
27 Lebanon 105.97 2017
28 Panama 105.87 2020
29 Luxembourg 105.78 2020
30 Portugal 101.22 2020
31 Finland 101.03 2020
32 Netherlands 100.88 2020
33 Iceland 99.84 2020
34 Morocco 96.28 2020
35 Mauritius 95.91 2020
36 Samoa 93.67 2020
37 Austria 93.26 2020
38 Kuwait 90.92 2018
39 United Arab Emirates 88.41 2020
40 Nepal 87.85 2020
41 Germany 85.71 2020
42 Malta 83.65 2020
43 Italy 83.48 2020
44 Jordan 83.14 2020
45 Greece 82.34 2020
46 Tunisia 81.71 2017
47 Georgia 79.88 2020
48 Barbados 79.70 2019
49 Belgium 75.77 2020
50 Turkey 75.07 2020
51 Bahrain 73.90 2015
52 Cabo Verde 73.19 2020
53 St. Lucia 72.89 2020
54 Namibia 72.52 2020
55 Armenia 72.20 2020
56 Bhutan 71.70 2020
57 Bolivia 71.20 2019
58 Brazil 70.19 2020
59 Honduras 69.76 2020
60 Belize 68.91 2020
61 Israel 68.57 2020
62 Slovak Republic 67.21 2020
63 Iran 66.06 2016
64 Oman 65.14 2019
65 Estonia 64.85 2020
66 Vanuatu 62.12 2020
67 El Salvador 62.11 2020
68 Costa Rica 60.67 2020
69 Montenegro 59.97 2020
70 Russia 59.97 2020
71 Croatia 59.77 2020
72 Grenada 59.47 2020
73 Bosnia and Herzegovina 58.48 2020
74 Jamaica 56.32 2020
75 North Macedonia 56.19 2020
76 St. Kitts and Nevis 55.43 2020
77 Antigua and Barbuda 55.39 2020
78 Peru 55.15 2020
79 India 54.80 2020
80 Colombia 54.07 2020
81 Saudi Arabia 53.97 2017
82 Dominica 53.24 2020
83 Eritrea 53.24 2014
84 Czech Republic 53.21 2020
85 Seychelles 53.02 2020
86 Philippines 52.07 2020
87 Bulgaria 51.74 2020
88 The Bahamas 51.46 2016
89 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 50.88 2020
90 Poland 50.03 2020
91 Sri Lanka 49.82 2019
92 Paraguay 49.71 2020
93 Ecuador 47.59 2020
94 Mongolia 45.79 2020
95 Serbia 45.52 2020
96 Bangladesh 45.32 2020
97 Trinidad and Tobago 44.95 2020
98 Slovenia 43.37 2020
99 Brunei 39.69 2020
100 Botswana 39.46 2020
101 Tonga 39.20 2020
102 Guyana 39.18 2020
103 Mexico 38.74 2020
104 Indonesia 38.70 2020
105 Albania 38.61 2020
106 Hungary 38.27 2020
107 Lithuania 37.64 2020
108 Guatemala 35.90 2020
109 Uzbekistan 35.67 2020
110 Latvia 34.35 2020
111 Belarus 33.11 2020
112 Libya 32.73 2020
113 Ireland 32.44 2020
114 Solomon Islands 32.36 2020
115 Kenya 32.04 2020
116 Dominican Republic 30.51 2020
117 Nicaragua 30.02 2020
118 Venezuela 29.90 2013
119 Algeria 29.69 2020
120 Senegal 29.17 2020
121 Kyrgyz Republic 28.46 2020
122 Ukraine 28.38 2020
123 Burkina Faso 28.34 2020
124 Uruguay 27.85 2020
125 Moldova 27.78 2020
126 Myanmar 27.41 2020
127 Egypt 27.10 2020
128 Togo 26.58 2020
129 Azerbaijan 26.08 2020
130 Romania 26.05 2020
131 Mali 25.98 2020
132 Kazakhstan 25.64 2020
133 Mozambique 24.80 2020
134 Rwanda 24.67 2020
135 Suriname 24.45 2020
136 Mauritania 22.74 2019
137 Burundi 22.39 2020
138 Lesotho 21.54 2019
139 Eswatini 21.30 2020
140 Côte d'Ivoire 21.14 2020
141 Lao PDR 20.92 2010
142 Syrian Arab Republic 20.74 2011
143 São Tomé and Principe 19.82 2020
144 Djibouti 19.65 2020
145 Papua New Guinea 18.19 2020
146 Ethiopia 17.71 2008
147 Pakistan 17.20 2020
148 Liberia 16.98 2018
149 Madagascar 16.41 2020
150 Guinea-Bissau 16.21 2020
151 Somalia 16.05 1989
152 Argentina 15.96 2017
153 Benin 15.54 2020
154 Timor-Leste 15.26 2020
155 Zambia 15.19 2020
156 Equatorial Guinea 15.17 2019
157 Comoros 14.86 2020
158 Cameroon 14.68 2018
159 Uganda 14.22 2020
160 Gabon 13.38 2019
161 Congo 13.35 2019
162 Tanzania 13.16 2020
163 Tajikistan 12.94 2020
164 Angola 12.88 2020
165 Nigeria 12.13 2020
166 Central African Republic 11.71 2019
167 Niger 11.70 2020
168 Ghana 11.48 2020
169 Malawi 10.47 2016
170 Chad 9.27 2019
171 Guinea 9.01 2020
172 Haiti 8.61 2020
173 Iraq 8.58 2018
174 The Gambia 7.91 2020
175 Sudan 7.90 2020
176 Dem. Rep. Congo 7.45 2020
177 Zimbabwe 6.45 2020
178 Sierra Leone 5.96 2020
179 Yemen 5.64 2013
180 Afghanistan 3.07 2020

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Development Relevance: Private sector development and investment - tapping private sector initiative and investment for socially useful purposes - are critical for poverty reduction. In parallel with public sector efforts, private investment, especially in competitive markets, has tremendous potential to contribute to growth. Private markets are the engine of productivity growth, creating productive jobs and higher incomes. And with government playing a complementary role of regulation, funding, and service provision, private initiative and investment can help provide the basic services and conditions that empower poor people - by improving health, education, and infrastructure.

Limitations and Exceptions: Credit to the private sector may sometimes include credit to state-owned or partially state-owned enterprises.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Credit is an important link in money transmission; it finances production, consumption, and capital formation, which in turn affect economic activity. The data on domestic credit provided to the private sector are taken from the financial corporations survey (line 52D) of the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) International Financial Statistics or, when unavailable, from its depository survey (line 32D). The banking sector includes monetary authorities (the central bank) and deposit money banks, as well as other financial corporations where data are available (including institutions that do not accept transferable deposits but do incur such liabilities as time and savings deposits). Examples of other financial corporations are finance and leasing companies, money lenders, insurance corporations, pension funds, and foreign exchange companies.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual