Global Poverty Prevalence

Here are some current data & trends on global poverty prevalence, followed by a few insights on what’s driving changes and what challenges lie ahead.

📊 Key Statistics

  1. Extreme Poverty (global poverty line / “surviving on very little”)
    • The World Bank’s new international poverty line (2025) is US$ 3.00/day per person (2021 PPP) for defining extreme poverty.
    • As of recent estimates, about 831 million people were living in extreme poverty globally.
    • This corresponds to roughly 9-10% of the world’s population.
  2. Multidimensional / Acute Poverty
    • According to a UNDP & OPHI report, around 1.1 billion people are living in acute multidimensional poverty, which includes deprivations in housing, sanitation, nutrition, education, etc.
    • Children are disproportionately affected: of that 1.1 billion, more than half are children under 18.
  3. Regional Concentration
    • Sub-Saharan Africa and conflict-affected or fragile countries carry a large burden of extreme poverty.
    • Also significant numbers are in South Asia.
  4. Trends Over Time
    • Since 1990, the number of people in extreme poverty dropped from around 2.3 billion to ≈831 million.
    • However, the rate of poverty reduction has slowed in recent years, due to various shocks: COVID-19, climate change, conflicts.
    • Revised estimates (due to updated purchasing power data) have slightly increased the count of people in extreme poverty, meaning some past figures were underestimates.

⚠ Drivers & Challenges

  • Economic shocks: The COVID-19 pandemic has reversed or slowed progress in many places.
  • Conflict and fragility: Countries with war or instability have much higher poverty rates, and people in these regions tend to suffer more deprivations (e.g. in basic needs).
  • Climate change & natural disasters: These also hit low-income regions hardest, undermining agricultural output, displacing populations, and reducing resilience.
  • Sluggish growth & debt burdens: For many low-income countries, growth has not been enough to lift large numbers of people out of poverty; high debt and fiscal constraints limit what governments can do.

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