Strange Maps

July 6, 2007

135 – Update On the GDP Map of the USA

Filed under: 21st Century Map, America., Non-Fictional, Statistics, USA — strangemaps @ 10:29 pm

I’m not in the habit of extensively revisiting strange maps already posted here, as there are so many more out there. But the map of the ‘US States Renamed For Countries With Similar GDPs’ (in the previous post) elicited such a deluge of interesting replies (including several cool spin-off maps) that it merits a second look.

First, a word about its origin. The map was suggested to me by a reader of the blog – the reference can be found at the end of the previous post. Trying to trace back the ultimate original source dead-ends; two fortuitous mails have since shed more light on the origin.

It turns out the map used in post #131 is a ‘remake’ of the original one. That map was entitled ‘The United States of the world’ and appeared in the Toronto newspaper the Globe & Mail, on March 8, 2005. It was sent to me by Ann El Khoury over at peoplesgeography (type in ‘petrol prices’ in the search field at the top of her page and check out the revelatory map of global price differences).

Here is that original map:

us-map-of-the-world-1.jpg

The small print at the bottom credits the concept of the map to a political scientist at Brigham Young University. This is contested by Douglas Coupland, who first mailed me to claim credit for the map, and then again after he found the map in his archives to express that he was “amazed and appaled” by the Globe and Mail’s apparent rogue crediting.

Mr Coupland quite adamantly states that he conceived this map, and spent “a lot of time” on the phone with the Globe and Mail’s magazine editor in the process. I have no reason to doubt him, and am very happy to hereby give him due credit – also because he kindly promised to send me another map he conceived.

Until then, let’s have a look at some of the spin-offs this map has generated.

One remark that crops up about the map mentioned above is that it doesn’t compare US economic size with that of its nearest competitors (as they’re all too big to ‘fit’ into just one state’s economy). This alternate map (found here) does just that, comparing the economies of the next four largest GDP countries to multiple states. Thus:

gdp_map_tjic.jpg

China’s GDP equals that of California, Oregon, Washington State and Nevada – oh, and Alaska and Hawaii
• The UK’s GDP compares to that of New York State, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and (apparently) Washington DC
• Good ol’ Deutschland’s GDP is as big as that of Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia.
Japan gobbles up all the remaining states, being all of New England, the Midwest and the West (minus the ‘Chinese’ coastal states and Nevada)

As remarked in the original post, the GDP comparison map is slightly misleading, since it might compare a state with a small population with a populous country, thus giving a skewed idea of personal wealth in both entities. A more individual criterium of wealth (or at least of development) is life expectancy at birth.

Leonardo Monasterio’s blog, about “regional economics, cliometrics and development” translates the map to that yardstick. Not easy, since “the differences in life expectancies at birth among US states (are) quite small and we had to repeat countries and even include the USA in the map.”

uslifeexpectancy.jpg

All states seem to be linked to countries that at first glance belong to the developmental top tier – except for Ohio and Delaware, which are on a par with Cuba, a relatively poor country but with excellent health-care.

Mr Monasterio, a Brazilian I’m sure, also posted this map (found here), revisiting the original idea on his home nation – itself a collection of states with greatly varying economic performance. More so than in the US, apparently: the range is from Finland to Sierra Leone. GDP is highest in the southern coastal states, lower everywhere else. This list of Brazilian states, ranked for GDP (found here at Wikipedia, quoting the 2004 GDP in the Brazilian currency, the real: 1 real currently buys you half a US dollar) links the states to the countries that replace them in the map reproduced here below:

gdpmapbrazil.jpg

1. Sao Paolo (BRL 546.607.616): Finland
2 Rio de Janeiro (BRL 222.564.408): Egypt
3 Minas Gerais (BRL 166.564.882): Kuwait
4 Rio Grande do Sul (BRL 142.874.611): Morocco
5 Parana (BRL 108.699.740): Croatia
6 Bahia (BRL 86.882.488): Ecuador
7 Santa Catarina (BRL 70.208.541): Bulgaria
8 Pernambuco (BRL 47.697.268): Kenya
9 Brasilia Distrito Federal (BRL 43.522.926): Cameroon
10 Goias (BRL 41.316.658): Panama
11 Amazonias (BRL 35.889.111): Iraq
12 Espirito Santo (BRL 34.488.268): Uruguay
13 Para (BRL 34.196.694): Jordan
14 Ceara (BRL 33.261.175): Trinidad & Tobago
15 Mato Grosso (BRL 27.935.132): Bolivia
16 Mato Grosso do Sul (BRL 19.954.505): Uganda
17 Maranhao (BRL 16.547.977): Afghanistan
18 Rio Grande do Norte (BRL 15.906.902): Zambia
19 Paraiba (BRL 14.863.913): Macedonia
20 Sergipe (BRL 13.121.517): Nicaragua
21 Alagoas (BRL 11.556.013): Guinea
22 Rondonia (BRL 9.744.908): Haiti
23 Piaui (BRL 8.611.106): Niger
24 Tocantins (BRL 4.768.864): Mongolia
25 Amapa (BRL 3.720.013): Mauritania
26 Acre (BRL 3.242.123): Central African Republic
27 Roraima (BRL 1.864.318): Sierra Leone

One final map, sent to me by Kanishka Gangopadhyay (brilliant name, that) who rightly remarks that “there’s been some controversy about the US States/Countries map you posted a while ago (…) Apparently someone took it upon themselves to correct it — though I can make no claim as to the accuracy of this map.”

statesxstatesxgdptest1-1.gif

This map was found here. Phew. That’s it, for the time being. If there’s any maps similar in concept to these ones that I missed, please let me know and I will add them to this post.


36 Comments »

  1. [...] 135 – Update On the GDP Map of the USA « strange maps (tags: ib_development) [...]

    Pingback by geography blogging alltheway » Blog Archiv » links for 2007-07-07 — July 7, 2007 @ 8:29 am

  2. Ok, the last one, is it adjusting GDP to account for population? Because California actually does have basically France’s GDP, with half the people. Of course, Oklahoma becoming Egypt is just wierd to me.

    Comment by Sam — July 7, 2007 @ 5:49 pm

  3. I’d love to see one with per capita gdp — or divorce rates.

    As in, http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2004/10/31/walking_the_walk_on_family_values/

    Bill

    Comment by Bill Y — July 9, 2007 @ 5:58 am

  4. [...] Interesting map (originally from the Globe & Mail) of the United States where the name of each state is replaced with that of a nation with a similar GDP. South Korea’s GDP is roughly the same as Florida’s, while the Great White North’s GDP is equal to that of Texas. [...]

    Pingback by The Marmot’s Hole » ‘Why the Bastards Matter’ — July 9, 2007 @ 9:28 am

  5. [...] GDP equals that of California, Oregon, Washington State and Nevada oh, and Alaska and Hawaii 135 – Update On the GDP Map of the USA strange maps m (always peccable, sometimes [...]

    Pingback by Why are 'things' from China so cheap? - Hypography Science Forums — July 9, 2007 @ 10:03 am

  6. [...] 135 – Update On the GDP Map of the USA I’m not in the habit of extensively revisiting strange maps already posted here, as there are so many more out […] [...]

    Pingback by Top Posts « WordPress.com — July 10, 2007 @ 12:02 am

  7. [...] Update On the GDP Map of the USA [...]

    Pingback by Good to Go Pile . . . « Trading for the Masses — July 10, 2007 @ 4:57 am

  8. Nice to know that even polite Canada thinks of us as “bastards”.

    Comment by Rey Fox — July 12, 2007 @ 5:40 am

  9. For the original Globe & Mail’s “United States of the World” map, is there any explanation for the colorings of the various states? I could not find a pattern.

    Comment by Ryan Hauck — July 13, 2007 @ 3:03 pm

  10. This is just some sort of bad fantasy, nothing more.

    Comment by Targus — July 20, 2007 @ 2:06 pm

  11. I also took a crack at updating the US States GDP as countries map because I couldn’t seem to reconcile the GDP numbers that I had available to me from Wikipedia with the map as it stood.

    When comparing domestic and foreign GDP’s one also runs into the issue of whether it is appropriate to use real GDP or purchasing parity GDP as the correct comparison. For example the dollar has an exchange rate with some country but that might not be equivalent to its purchasing power. I used purchasing power parity GDP although the matchings are not too different.

    Comment by Richard — July 20, 2007 @ 2:34 pm

  12. what is this site all about?
    I have read about the American debt to foreign nations being something like $9 trillion!! is this what this blog is about?

    Comment by Roosterjoe — July 23, 2007 @ 7:53 am

  13. Your blog was “blog of the week” in the St Louis (Missouri, USA) Post-Dispatch today. I am a cartographer and have to say I absolutely loved your site and have bookmarked it. Thanks for sharing these-they are a real find.

    Comment by Chosenlass — August 7, 2007 @ 12:56 pm

  14. [quote]The 2004 total gross state product for Illinois was nearly $522 billion USD. The 2004 per capita income was $34,721 USD.[/quote]

    [quote]Mexico GDP 2006 estimate
    Total $1.134 trillion USD
    Per capita $11,249 USD [/quote]

    A huge discrepancy which makes their economies not comparable at all. This map is bullshit.

    Comment by Tormenta — August 16, 2007 @ 11:22 pm

  15. [...] found a blog that publishes strange maps. Here is one where the name of each state is replaced with a country that has a similar [...]

    Pingback by BonBonTheJon » Very interesting map — October 15, 2007 @ 10:17 pm

  16. THIS IS DUMP

    Comment by PABLO — December 12, 2007 @ 6:44 pm

  17. THIS IS DUMB

    Comment by PABLO — December 12, 2007 @ 6:45 pm

  18. [...] Este mapa de los EE.UU., que se puede ver en el blog Strange Maps, muestra en cada uno de los estados norteamericanos el nombre del país del mundo que tiene un producto interior bruto semejante al suyo. El resultado ya pone de manifiesto algunas desigualdades económicas evidentes entre los diversos estados federados en los Estados Unidos, pero sería interesante ver un mapa semejante con el producto interior bruto per capita (y no lo hay en las diversas versiones recogidas aquí). [...]

    Pingback by Desigualdades internas | Policrítica — January 17, 2008 @ 9:16 am

  19. [...] housing in the United States B. The defense budget of the United States C. The United States Gross Domestic Product (2007) D. The present value of unfunded social security obligations E. The 75 year Medicare [...]

    Pingback by Who says economics isn’t fun? Some games: « The Sagamore Journal — May 21, 2008 @ 12:35 am

  20. You people are ridicolous. You are using 8 years old data, when the USD was still overvalued. The picture is very different now… And btw the GDP of France is larger than the GDP of California…

    Comment by Andrea — May 28, 2008 @ 10:34 am

  21. I had a class with the BYU professor you mentioned. Tough class, he asked us to read the entire A section of the NY Times every day and would quiz us on any of its contents from the past week on top of the extensive reading. The class was an upper-level international politics course. More notably, he handed the map out to all of his students and I never realized that it had been published in a UK newspaper.

    Comment by Rory — May 30, 2008 @ 1:31 pm

  22. i have one question and i hope u reply.
    REAL GDP IS INCREASINGLY CRITICISED FOR ITS ALLEGED FAILURE TO ADQUATELY MESURE THE STANDERD OF LIVING TO WHAT EXTENT DO YOU THINK THIS CRITICISM IS VALID.?

    Comment by firoz ali — June 5, 2008 @ 5:06 pm

  23. [...] UPDATE:  http://strangemaps.wordpress.com/2007/07/06/135-update-on-the-gdp-map-of-the-usa/ Posted in Cartography, [...]

    Pingback by Hot Meme : The U.S. States Renamed According to GDP Size « Meme Menagerie — August 18, 2008 @ 11:31 pm

  24. what the hell is GDP??? And USD? pleeeease, i must know!

    Comment by JULIA — September 4, 2008 @ 12:39 pm

  25. [...] Check out this cool map that replaces the names of states in the USA with the names of other countri…. (You may want to copy the main map onto your desktop, and view it from there. It’s big.) [...]

    Pingback by GDP Map of the USA | MichaelPrewitt.com — September 26, 2008 @ 1:38 pm

  26. [...] just found Strange Maps and their interesting map which maps the GDPs of various countries onto their matching US states. [...]

    Pingback by Strange Maps - World GDP v US States | James5 — October 23, 2008 @ 10:39 pm

  27. Good map fun, I enjoyed those maps… I may have to copy them and spread them to my friends for a laugh…LOL.

    Victor

    Comment by Victor — November 3, 2008 @ 8:53 am

  28. First map is not only strange, it’s wrong.

    At least for the part showing France GDP as the same as Califirnia.

    California’s 2007 GDP is $1.8 trillion. France’s is $2.59 trillion.

    Don’t know if it worths to waste time checking the other data.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_GDP_(nominal)

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)

    Comment by Bernard — December 22, 2008 @ 12:08 pm

  29. Driver’s Ed on the Net. The Cheapest and Best On-line Drivers Education…

    nowshera….

    Trackback by Driver's Ed on the Net. The Cheapest and Best On-line Drivers Education — April 27, 2009 @ 8:43 pm

  30. thanks for this map..
    good 
    luck

    Comment by Solomon — May 11, 2009 @ 7:44 am

  31. merci

    Comment by aspicco . — May 17, 2009 @ 5:31 am

  32. [...] At last, the worlds of cartography, vexillology and population statistics meet! This map was inspired by earlier maps of the US, with its states renamed for countries with a similar GDP (see posts #131 and #135). [...]

    Pingback by 388 – US States As Countries of Equal Population « Strange Maps — June 6, 2009 @ 9:33 am

  33. Representing data about countries on a map is far more interesting than seeing it in a table. Thanks for taking the time to post all this. Imagine that little old Utah is equal to Peru or Kuwait in GDP.

    Comment by Rick — June 8, 2009 @ 4:57 am

  34. teşekkür ederim

    Comment by yory — June 12, 2009 @ 9:36 pm

  35. Vielen Dank

    Comment by moon — July 3, 2009 @ 4:37 am

  36. Muchas gracias

    Comment by sun — July 4, 2009 @ 7:08 am

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