Total economy net financial worth

Norway's net financial worth exceeds the bottom 37 countries combined.

OECDUpdated Dec '25

Summary

5 Wealthiest Economies by Wealth

1Norway
USD 171K
2Switzerland
USD 72.9K
3Luxembourg
USD 51.6K
4Netherlands
USD 43.3K
5Denmark
USD 42.1K
Dataset Median
USD -7,381

5 Poorest Economies by Wealth

38Australia
USD -27.0K
39Spain
USD -32.0K
40Portugal
USD -37.4K
41Greece
USD -49.1K
42Ireland
USD -174K

Leader

171,394

Norway leads with $171B net worth

Outlier

-174,008

Ireland ranks dead last at -$174B

Gap

2.4x

Switzerland leads Europe at $73B

Data

42 results

1NorwayUSD 171,394
2SwitzerlandUSD 72,882
3LuxembourgUSD 51,584
4NetherlandsUSD 43,333
5DenmarkUSD 42,075
6GermanyUSD 37,055
7JapanUSD 27,948
8BelgiumUSD 27,022
9IsraelUSD 16,258
10CanadaUSD 15,079

Map

Total economy net financial worth

-174,008
171,394

Insights

Generated automatically using AI

Leader

171,394

Norway's massive sovereign wealth fund drives its $171B net financial worth

Outlier

-174,008

Ireland posts the worst net financial worth at -$174B, below even Greece

Gap

2.4x

Switzerland's $73B net worth is 2.4x larger than third-place Luxembourg

Trend

15

Only 15 countries maintain positive net financial worth positions

Cluster

5 of 5

All five Nordic countries rank in the global top 15 for net financial worth

Methodology

This dataset is sourced from the OECD through its official SDMX data service.
Rankdat does not alter or model the underlying values — we only clean formats, standardize country names, and reshape the data for visualization.

OECD compiles these indicators from a mix of sources including national statistical offices, international household surveys (such as Gallup World Poll, EU-SILC, ISSP), and harmonised administrative datasets.
Each indicator follows the definitions and structure specified in the OECD’s Data Structure Definition (DSD) for this dataflow.

Because indicators originate from different countries and surveys, collection years, sampling methods, and questionnaire wording may vary. OECD applies harmonisation rules to improve comparability, but differences in national methodology may still affect cross-country comparisons.

Full definitions, data collection notes, and quality documentation are available through the OECD metadata portal linked in the Sources section.

Source