Performance warehouse
IndicatorMeasure #100716943Value #104642985

ECONOMIC GROWTH

Real Gross Domestic Product for the city of Portland

A complete source packet for this Performance Portland measure: current value, official scale, history, narrative notes, context, and links.

1

Start with value

Use the latest official value and current trend as the first read.

2

Check why it matters

Gross domestic product (GDP) is the measure of all the goods and services produced in Portland.

3

Use the source packet

Continue to the chart, official notes, topic links, source URLs, and full history table.

History

Official values

This chart uses the official actual values cached from ClearImpact. The latest point is highlighted; the table below preserves every raw row.

Export source packet

Latest

$80.20Bil

2024

First shown

$55.70Bil

2011

Change shown

$24.5

Within visible history

$-9.6$15.2$40.1$65$89.82011$55.70Bil2012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024$80.20BilX-axis: reporting period. Y-axis: official actual value.

Full source history

Every cached ClearImpact row for this measure.

PeriodActualTargetTrend
2024$80.20Bil1
2023$76.90Bil1
2022$76.70Bil-1
2021$80.10Bil1
2020$75.90Bil-1
2019$78.10Bil1
2018$75.70Bil1
2017$72.60Bil1
2016$69.60Bil1
2015$65.20Bil1
2014$60.80Bil1
2013$58.40Bil1
2012$56.50Bil1
2011$55.70Bil1
2010$55.00Bil-1
2009$56.10Bil0

Narrative Tabs

Official Performance Portland notes

Why Is This Important?

Gross domestic product (GDP) is the measure of all the goods and services produced in Portland. It is the standard metric for tracking the size of the total economy and its growth over time. GDP measures the value of final goods and services produced within the United States. Also known as value added, GDP is the value of goods and services produced by private industry and government, less the value of goods and services used up in production. Goods are tangible objects. Durable goods, such as autos and furniture that have a useful life of three years or more, and non-durable goods, such as fuel, food, and clothing. Services are economic exchanges that cannot be placed inside a box. Health care, car repair, dog walking, legal advice, etc. are all examples of services.

What Do The Numbers Show?

From 2012 to 2019, the Portland economy enjoyed an impressive GDP growth rate averaging 4.7% a year, adjusted for inflation. This was about twice as fast as the U.S. GDP growth. Over this seven-year period, the city experienced a cumulative increase of 38% in GDP. For 2024, the GDP for the city of Portland was $80.2 billion. This is an increase of 2.7% from the $78.1 billion figure in 2019. In contrast, the national GDP grew by almost 13%.

How Did We Arrive at These Numbers?

The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) estimates GDP at the county level on an annual basis. The county-level GDP is a function of the total covered wages of all workers in the county. Covered wages are the total wages that are filed with state and federal agencies listed on a W-4 form. Applying the BEA methodology using the city of Portland total covered wages yields an estimate for the GDP for the city of Portland.

Where Can I Find More Information?

Detailed GDP estimates for 3,100 counties can be found at the Bureau of Economic Analysis website .