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The metroplex economy is the sixth largest in the United States, with a 2010 gross metropolitan product of $374 billion.
The city's gross metropolitan product was $231 billion in 2010, making it the 12th largest metropolitan economy in the United States.
A 2010 Greyhill Advisors study indicated that the Los Angeles metropolitan area had a gross metropolitan product of $736 billion.
The New York metropolitan area had a gross metropolitan product of approximately $1.28 trillion in 2010, making it the largest regional economy in the United States.
According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the Philadelphia area had a total gross metropolitan product of $347 billion in 2010, the seventh-largest metropolitan economy in the United States.
It is also the sixth largest gross metropolitan product (GMP) in the United States, and approximately tenth largest by GMP in the world.
The agglomeration of Tokyo is the world's largest economy, with the largest gross metropolitan product at purchasing power parity (PPP) in the world according to a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers.
In 2010 and 2011, the Brookings Institution reported that Brevard ranked in the bottom fifth of the nation's top metro areas, based on unemployment, gross metropolitan product, housing prices and foreclosed properties.
Chicago has the third largest gross metropolitan product in the United States-approximately $532 billion according to 2010 estimates, after only the urban agglomerations of New York City and Los Angeles, in the first and second place, respectively.
Economically speaking, the agglomeration of Paris is among the largest economic centers in the world, with the sixth-largest gross metropolitan product in the world in 2008 according to a study by PricewaterhouseCoopers whose main results are shown in the table below.
Population and gross metropolitan product (GMP)' U.S. Metro Economies: Gross Metropolitan Product with Housing Update', The United States Conference of Mayors, June 2008 estimates are presented.
Greater Boston has many sites and people significant to American history and culture, particularly the American Revolution, civil rights, literature, and politics, and is one of the nation's centers of education, finance, industry, and tourism, with the sixth-largest Gross metropolitan product in the country and twelfth-largest in the world.
From an economic perspective, the Denton campus lies within the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metropolitan area, as defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, which as of 2011, had the sixth highest GDP (aka gross metropolitan product) of the nation's 366 metropolitan areas.