Why simplify country names?

The IMF World Economic Outlook uses formal country names like "Andorra, Principality of" or "Congo, Democratic Republic of the". While precise, these names add visual clutter that makes charts harder to read.

We use short, commonly recognized names to improve readability. This generally aligns with ISO 3166-1 short name conventions, with a few documented exceptions.

Standardization rules

  • Remove suffixes: "Republic of", "Kingdom of", "Islamic Republic of", etc.
  • Remove prefixes: "The" when placed after the name
  • Use common names: "South Korea" instead of "Korea, Republic of"
  • Simplify special regions: "Hong Kong" instead of full administrative designation
  • Normalize characters: Remove diacritics for consistency

Deviations from ISO 3166-1

In a few cases, we deviate from ISO 3166-1 short names for clarity or common usage:

Our name ISO 3166-1 Reason
South Korea Korea (the Republic of) More commonly used in English
Taiwan Taiwan (Province of China) Simplified, neutral designation
Cote d'Ivoire Côte d'Ivoire ASCII compatibility (no diacritics)
Congo-Brazzaville Congo (the) Distinguishes from the other Congo
Democratic Republic of Congo Congo (the Democratic Republic of the) Simplified, commonly used
Turkey Türkiye ASCII compatibility, historical usage

Complete list of changes

66 country names were modified from the original IMF data:

Original (IMF) Simplified
Afghanistan, Islamic Republic ofAfghanistan
Andorra, Principality ofAndorra
Armenia, Republic ofArmenia
Aruba, Kingdom of the NetherlandsAruba
Azerbaijan, Republic ofAzerbaijan
Bahamas, TheBahamas
Bahrain, Kingdom ofBahrain
Belarus, Republic ofBelarus
Brunei DarussalamBrunei
China, People's Republic ofChina
Comoros, Union of theComoros
Congo, Democratic Republic of theDemocratic Republic of Congo
Congo, Republic ofCongo-Brazzaville
Côte d'IvoireCote d'Ivoire
Croatia, Republic ofCroatia
Czech RepublicCzechia
Egypt, Arab Republic ofEgypt
Equatorial Guinea, Republic ofEquatorial Guinea
Eritrea, The State ofEritrea
Estonia, Republic ofEstonia
Eswatini, Kingdom ofEswatini
Ethiopia, The Federal Democratic Republic ofEthiopia
Fiji, Republic ofFiji
Gambia, TheGambia
Hong Kong SAR, People's Republic of ChinaHong Kong
Iran, Islamic Republic ofIran
Kazakhstan, Republic ofKazakhstan
Korea, Republic ofSouth Korea
Kosovo, Republic ofKosovo
Kyrgyz RepublicKyrgyzstan
Lao P.D.R.Laos
Latvia, Republic ofLatvia
Lesotho, Kingdom ofLesotho
Liechtenstein, Principality ofLiechtenstein
Lithuania, Republic ofLithuania
Macao SAR, People's Republic of ChinaMacao
Madagascar, Republic ofMadagascar
Marshall Islands, Republic of theMarshall Islands
Mauritania, Islamic Republic ofMauritania
Micronesia, Federated States ofMicronesia
Moldova, Republic ofMoldova
Mozambique, Republic ofMozambique
Nauru, Republic ofNauru
Netherlands, TheNetherlands
North Macedonia, Republic ofNorth Macedonia
Palau, Republic ofPalau
Poland, Republic ofPoland
Russian FederationRussia
San Marino, Republic ofSan Marino
São Tomé and Príncipe, Democratic Republic ofSao Tome and Principe
Serbia, Republic ofSerbia
Slovak RepublicSlovakia
Slovenia, Republic ofSlovenia
South Sudan, Republic ofSouth Sudan
St. Kitts and NevisSaint Kitts and Nevis
St. LuciaSaint Lucia
St. Vincent and the GrenadinesSaint Vincent and the Grenadines
Syrian Arab RepublicSyria
Taiwan Province of ChinaTaiwan
Tajikistan, Republic ofTajikistan
Tanzania, United Republic ofTanzania
Timor-Leste, Democratic Republic ofTimor-Leste
Türkiye, Republic ofTurkey
Uzbekistan, Republic ofUzbekistan
Venezuela, República Bolivariana deVenezuela
Yemen, Republic ofYemen

Data integrity

Only country names are changed. The underlying data (GDP values, country codes) remains exactly as provided by the IMF. The JSON export from the main page uses simplified names.

For reference, you can find the original IMF dataset and the normalization script on GitHub.