It no where states that discussion is only limited to nominal GDP. Heck the word nominal even does not show up in your original post or topic.
Did you read the original post and look at the gigantic chart?
Did you read about the rankings of the increase in absolute NOMINAL GDP?
It is understood that comparing national GDPs is in nominal GDP. When you derailed the thread into bullshit PPP, I clarify that it is about nominal GDP. Yet, you persisted in discussion ridiculous PPP dollars that do not exist.
Compare the chart and the absolute GDPs figures. They do not match the IMF figures for PPP. They only match IMF figures for nominal GDP. The citation link would have confirmed that these are IMF nominal GDPs. I told you this over and over again. Yet, you kept trying to steer the discussion to nonsense PPP.
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The IMF has released its latest April 2017 WEO (World Economic Outlook) data set. It is the most up-to-date GDP data available.
We will look at the IMF data for the past eight years (2010-2017) to filter out yearly gyrations and examine the long-term trend.
When you look at the world's 11 largest economies, you will notice that only three countries experienced significant economic growth. China grew the most at nearly 100% and an absolute growth of
$5.73 trillion ($11.79 trillion - $6.06 trillion).
The US came in second with
$4.45 trillion of absolute growth at nearly 30% growth.
India's absolute growth was a meager
$0.75 trillion at 44% growth.
All of the other world's-11-largest-economies showed little or negative growth.
Since China (+$5.73 trillion) and the US (+$4.45 trillion) produced the only truly significant economic growth in the world during the past eight years, it makes sense to only pay attention to China and the US. The other countries are stagnant.
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Primary source from the IMF:
World Economic Outlook Database April 2017 | IMF
Wikipedia has arranged the latest IMF April 2017 WEO data into a well-organized chart.