Australia and Japan Economies: A Side-by-Side Table Comparison

Australia and Japan present a fascinating comparison. Australia’s population is about one-fifth that of Japan, yet it boasts a land area over 20 times larger. While Japan’s economy is 2.5 times bigger, Australians enjoy a significantly higher income per person. Australia also has greater economic freedom but faces higher income inequality. In defense spending, Australia allocates a larger share of its GDP, but Japan’s total expenditure is much greater. Trade dynamics reveal Australia imports less and exports primarily raw materials, while Japan focuses on cars and machinery.

Basic Indicators

IndicatorAustralia Flag of Australia %28converted%29Japan Flag of JapanComparison
Population source (2022 data), updated 202426.01 million (54th)125.12 million (11th)Australia’s population is approximately 0.21 times that of Japan.
Surface area (sq. km) source (2022 data), updated 20247.74 million sq. km (6th)0.38 million sq. km (61st)Australia is 20.4 times larger than Japan.
GDP source (2022 data), updated 20241,692.96B USD (12th)4,256.41B USD (3rd)Japan’s total GDP is 2.5 times larger than Australia’s.
GDP per capita source (2022 data), updated 2024$65,100 (13th)34,017 USD (33rd)Australia’s GDP per capita is roughly 91% higher than Japan’s, with Australians producing about $31,082 more per person annually.

Economic Indexes

IndexAustralia Flag of Australia %28converted%29Japan Flag of JapanComparison
HDI (Human Development Index) source (2022 data), updated 20240.946 (10th)0.92 (24th)Australia’s HDI is 0.946 (very high), while Japan’s is 0.920 (very high). Australia’s score is 0.026 higher, indicating a slight advantage in human development overall.
Index of Economic Freedom source (2024 data)76.2 (12th)67.5 (36th)Australia’s Index of Economic Freedom is 12.9% higher than Japan’s, 8.7 points more.
GINI source (2022 data), updated 202434.3 (2018 est.)32.9 (2013 est.)With a 4.3% higher Gini coefficient, Australia has a higher degree of income inequality than Japan.

International trade source(2023 data), updated 2024

IndicatorAustralia Flag of Australia %28converted%29Japan Flag of Japan
Total imports363.57B USD989.84B
Imports % of GDP19.71%25.30%
Main import partnersChina 28%, US 10%, South Korea 6%, Japan 6%, Singapore 5%China 22%, Australia 10%, US 10%, UAE 5%, Saudi Arabia 4%
Main import itemsrefined petroleum, cars, garments, trucks, plastic productscrude petroleum, natural gas, coal, integrated circuits, garments
Total exports447.51B USD920.74B
Exports % of GDP25.43%21.54%
Main export PartnersChina 29%, Japan 19%, South Korea 10%, India 7%, Taiwan 6%US 19%, China 19%, South Korea 7%, Taiwan 7%, Thailand 4%
Main export itemscoal, iron ore, natural gas, gold, wheatcars, machinery, integrated circuits, vehicle parts/accessories, refined petroleum

Australia’s imports are about 37% of Japan’s, and Australia imports 22% less of its GDP compared to Japan’s imports. Australia’s exports are 447.51B USD, mainly coal and minerals, while Japan’s are 920.74B USD, focusing on cars and machinery.

Military Power source (2023 data), updated 2024

IndicatorAustralia Flag of Australia %28converted%29Japan Flag of Japan
Military expenditure32.3B USD50.2B USD
Military expenditure (% of GDP)1.90%1.08%
Active military59k247k
Active military per 1,000 capita3.82.6

Australia’s military expenditure is 35% lower at $32.34 billion compared to Japan’s $50.16 billion, and while Australia allocates a larger percentage of its GDP (1.90%) to defense than Japan (1.08%), Japan’s overall spending remains significantly higher.

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