Germany vs Yemen Comparison

Country Comparison
Germany Flag

Germany

84.1M (2025)

VS
Yemen Flag

Yemen

41.8M (2025)

Comprehensive comparison across 9 categories and 44 indicators

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Germany Flag

Germany

Population: 84.1M (2025) Area: 357K km² GDP: $4.7T (2025)
Capital: Berlin
Continent: Europe
Official Languages: German
Currency: EUR
HDI: 0.959 (5.)
Yemen Flag

Yemen

Population: 41.8M (2025) Area: 528K km² GDP: $17.4B (2025)
Capital: Sana'a
Continent: Asia
Official Languages: Arabic
Currency: YER
HDI: 0.470 (184.)

Geography and Demographics

Germany
Yemen
Area
357K km²
528K km²
Total population
84.1M (2025)
41.8M (2025)
Population density
239 people/km² (2025)
64.8 people/km² (2025)
Average age
45.5 (2025)
18.4 (2025)

Economy and Finance

Germany
Yemen
Total GDP
$4.7T (2025)
$17.4B (2025)
GDP per capita
$55,910 (2025)
$417 (2025)
Inflation rate
2.1% (2025)
20.4% (2025)
Growth rate
0.0% (2025)
-1.5% (2025)
Minimum wage
$2.3K (2025)
$50 (2024)
Tourism revenue
$49.6B (2025)
$100M (2025)
Unemployment rate
3.4% (2025)
17.0% (2025)
Public debt
63.7% (2025)
70.1% (2025)
Trade balance
$15.8K (2025)
-$5.4K (2025)

Quality of Life and Health

Germany
Yemen
Human development
0.959 (5.)
0.470 (184.)
Happiness index
6,753 (22.)
3,561 (140.)
Health Exp. per Cap. ($)
$6.2K (11.8%)
$38 (6%)
Life expectancy
81.7 (2025)
69.6 (2025)
Safety index
89.8 (17.)
28.2 (186.)

Education and Technology

Germany
Yemen
Education Exp. (% GDP)
4.6% (2025)
No data
Literacy rate
No data
No data
Primary school completion
No data
No data
Internet usage
94.7% (2025)
19.2% (2025)
Internet speed
98.69 Mbps (57.)
12.96 Mbps (149.)

Environment and Sustainability

Germany
Yemen
Renewable energy
68.0% (2025)
19.5% (2025)
Carbon emissions per capita
570 kg per capita (2025)
11 kg per capita (2025)
Forest area
32.7% (2025)
1.0% (2025)
Freshwater resources
154 km³ (2025)
2 km³ (2025)
Air quality
8.97 µg/m³ PM2.5 (2025)
28.29 µg/m³ PM2.5 (2025)

Military Power

Germany
Yemen
Military expenditure
$110B (2025)
No data
Military power rank
119,777 (8.)
0 (2025.)

Governance and Politics

Germany
Yemen
Democracy index
8.73 (2024)
1.95 (2024)
Corruption perception
76 (15.)
14 (168.)
Political stability
0.6 (71.)
-2.6 (192.)
Press freedom
83.3 (9.)
33.8 (149.)

Infrastructure and Services

Germany
Yemen
Clean water access
100.0% (2025)
61.8% (2025)
Electricity access
100.0% (2025)
79.9% (2025)
Electricity price
0.32 $/kWh (2025)
0.07 $/kWh (2025)
Paved Roads
100 % (2025)
No data
Traffic deaths (per 100K)
3.51 /100K (2025)
32.54 /100K (2025)
Retirement age
65.58 (2025)
60 (2025)

Tourism and International Relations

Germany
Yemen
Passport power
91.08 (2025)
30.91 (2025)
Tourist arrivals
28.5M (2022)
398K (2015)
Tourism revenue
$49.6B (2025)
$100M (2025)
World heritage sites
54 (2025)
5 (2025)

Comparison Result

Germany
Germany Flag
33.0

Superior Fields

Leader
Germany
Yemen
Yemen Flag
6.0

Superior Fields

* This score reflects overall livability and quality of life, not just economic or military strength

GDP Comparison

Total GDP

$4.7T (2025)
Germany
vs
$17.4B (2025)
Yemen
Difference: %27141

GDP per Capita

$55,910 (2025)
Germany
vs
$417 (2025)
Yemen
Difference: %13308

Comparison Evaluation

Germany Flag

Germany Evaluation

Germany dominates in: • Germany has 272.4x higher GDP • Germany has 134.1x higher GDP per capita • Germany has 46.5x higher minimum wage • Germany has 164.0x higher healthcare spending per capita
Yemen Flag

Yemen Evaluation

While Yemen ranks lower overall compared to Germany, specific areas demonstrate competitive advantages:

Competitive areas for Yemen: • Yemen has 3.4x higher birth rate • Yemen has 48% higher land area

Overall Evaluation

Final Conclusion

Germany vs. Yemen: The Apex of Stability and a Nation in Agony

A Tale of Unparalleled Security and Profound Crisis

To compare Germany and Yemen is to witness the vast and tragic gulf that separates the world’s most stable nations from its most fragile. It’s like contrasting a well-funded, state-of-the-art hospital with a field clinic in a war zone. Germany is a bastion of peace, prosperity, and institutional strength, a place where the state functions with remarkable efficiency to protect its citizens. Yemen, a land of ancient history and stunning, unique landscapes, is currently suffering from one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, fractured by civil war, famine, and the collapse of state institutions. One is a picture of what works; the other is a devastating portrait of what has been broken.

The Most Striking Contrasts

  • State of Being: Germany enjoys profound peace and is a cornerstone of European stability. Yemen is in a state of catastrophic civil and proxy war, which has led to widespread destruction and suffering.
  • Economic Health: Germany is an economic superpower with a massive trade surplus and a high standard of living. Yemen’s economy has been shattered. It is the poorest country in the Middle East, with mass unemployment and a population heavily reliant on foreign aid for survival.
  • Daily Security: A German citizen’s life is defined by an overwhelming sense of security, backed by the rule of law and reliable public services. A Yemeni citizen’s life is defined by daily uncertainty, with threats ranging from airstrikes and armed conflict to food and water shortages.
  • Heritage and Present: Both nations have incredible heritage. Germany has meticulously preserved its castles and cathedrals. Yemen is home to UNESCO World Heritage sites like the old city of Sana'a and Socotra island, but this ancient heritage is now endangered by the ongoing conflict.

The System vs. Survival Paradox

Germany has built one of the world’s most comprehensive systems for human welfare. Its social safety net, healthcare, and legal frameworks are designed to manage risk and ensure a high quality of life. It’s a society where individual thriving is supported by a robust collective structure. In Yemen, the formal systems have largely collapsed. Life has become a matter of pure survival. The "system" is now the resilience of the family, the tribe, and the local community. People rely on ancient social bonds, not modern state institutions, to endure. Germany demonstrates the power of a successful state; Yemen demonstrates the incredible strength of the human spirit when the state fails.

Practical Advice

If You Want to Start a Business:

In Germany: One of the world’s best, most stable, and most reliable places to do business, especially in high-value sectors.

In Yemen: Impossible and unsafe for any conventional foreign investor. The country is a conflict zone with a non-functioning economy.

If You Want to Settle Down:

Germany is for you if: You seek safety, opportunity, and a high quality of life in a free and democratic society.

Yemen is for you if: It is your home, and you are unable to leave. People do not choose to move to Yemen in its current state; they pray for the day peace will return to their homeland.

Tourism Experience

Germany: A safe, comfortable, and endlessly varied tourism destination, open to all and easily navigable.

Yemen: Once a destination for intrepid travelers seeking the legendary "Arabia Felix"—from the unique "skyscraper" cities of Shibam to the otherworldly landscapes of Socotra—it is now one of the most dangerous places on the planet. All tourism has ceased.

Conclusion: A Tale of Two Fates

This is not a comparison of choices, but a stark look at the divergent fates of nations in the 21st century. Germany is a story of success, of lessons learned from a dark past to build a peaceful and prosperous present. It is a nation that offers its people a future. Yemen is a story of immense tragedy, a beautiful and ancient civilization torn apart by internal strife and external interference. It is a nation whose people are fighting simply for a present. The comparison serves as a powerful reminder that peace and stability are the most precious commodities a country can have.

🏆 Final Verdict

Winner: The concept of a "winner" is meaningless here. The victory belongs to peace, to functioning institutions, and to the global responsibility to end humanitarian crises. By this measure, Germany lives in a world of victory, while the people of Yemen endure an ongoing defeat.

Practical Decision: The only decision is a moral one: to be aware of the crisis in Yemen and to support organizations that provide humanitarian aid to its suffering population.

💡 Surprising Fact

Germany has some of the world's strictest water purity and protection laws, ensuring clean and safe drinking water for its population. Yemen was the first country in the world to start cultivating coffee for trade (from the port of Mocha) and has a coffee culture dating back centuries, but it is now one of the most water-stressed countries on Earth, where access to clean water is a primary driver of conflict and disease.

Other Country Comparisons

Data Disclaimer: Projected data (future years) are estimates based on mathematical models. Actual values may differ. Learn about our methodology →

Data Sources

Comparison data is aggregated from multiple authoritative international organizations:

World Bank Open Data - Development and economic indicators
UN Data - Population and demographic statistics
IMF Data Portal - International financial statistics
WHO Data - Global health statistics
OECD Statistics - Economic and social data
Our Methodology - Learn how we process and analyze data

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