Live side-by-side comparison of government debt. Argentina currently owes about 1.5ร more โ a gap of $170.2 billion. Updated every second from IMF baselines.
By total government debt, Argentina ranks 19th-largest and Greece ranks 28th-largest among the 137 sovereigns tracked on this site.
On a per-citizen basis the picture can look different from the nominal totals: a resident's notional share of the national debt in Greece is roughly 3.0× that in Argentina ($34,284 vs $11,451 per person).
The debt-to-GDP picture is asymmetric here: Greece sits at 146% of GDP, well above Argentina's 70%, meaning Greece owes far more relative to the size of its own economy — even where the nominal, dollar-for-dollar comparison above suggests otherwise.
The gap between them is widening: Argentina's debt is growing faster in dollar terms ($200/sec vs $63/sec for Greece), adding roughly $11,836,800 to the difference each day.
Scale is part of the story too: Argentina's population (46M) is about 4.4× Greece's (10M), which is part of why the nominal and per-capita comparisons above can point in different directions — a government's debt load scales loosely with the size of both its economy and its population, not either alone.
This analysis is generated automatically from live data as an educational orientation, not financial advice — see the methodology page for definitions and caveats.