A child attending a rural school classroom for an article about extreme child poverty

Global extreme child poverty drops 18% as South Asia leads the way

Nearly 100 million fewer children are living in extreme poverty today than a decade ago. New World Bank research puts the number of children under 18 surviving on less than $3 a day at roughly 412 million in 2024 C.E. — down from about 507 million in 2014 C.E. That is a measurable, policy-driven shift affecting nearly one in five children who were previously among the world’s poorest.

At a glance

  • Extreme child poverty: Approximately 412 million children lived on under $3 per day in 2024 C.E., down from roughly 507 million in 2014 C.E. — a reduction of nearly 95 million children in a single decade.
  • South Asia progress: Extreme child poverty in South Asia more than halved over the past decade, with India contributing a large share of that reduction through sustained investment in education, nutrition, and health care access.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa gap: Despite global gains, Sub-Saharan Africa is home to over three-quarters of all children in extreme poverty while representing only about 23% of the global child population — and its poverty rate of around 52% has barely moved since 2014 C.E.

Where progress has been fastest

Some of the most striking gains have come from South Asia and East Asia and the Pacific. In South Asia, extreme child poverty more than halved over the past decade — a result that reflects sustained investment in schools, nutrition programs, and basic health infrastructure rather than chance.

UNICEF analysis has linked these gains directly to improvements in education and health care access, particularly in India. When families have access to functioning public services, children’s outcomes shift. The data makes that connection clear.

East Asia and the Pacific saw similar momentum. Rapid economic growth, combined with targeted social protection programs, lifted millions of children above the extreme poverty threshold. These two regions together demonstrate that large-scale poverty reduction is achievable within a generation — not a distant aspiration but a documented reality.

The persistent challenge in Sub-Saharan Africa

The global picture is not uniformly bright.

Sub-Saharan Africa holds more than three-quarters of the world’s children in extreme poverty despite being home to roughly 23% of the global child population. Its poverty rate has remained close to 52% — nearly unchanged from 2014 C.E. levels. Fragile and conflict-affected states account for much of this stagnation. Where governments are unstable and basic services are disrupted by violence, poverty reduction programs cannot gain traction.

Progress elsewhere does not erase the depth of that challenge. The global 18% decline deserves recognition, and so does the work that remains.

Better data, clearer picture

One underreported part of this story is how poverty measurement itself has improved. In 2025 C.E., the World Bank updated its international poverty lines to include thresholds at $3, $4.20, and $8.30 per day — a shift that better reflects the actual cost of living across different countries. The newest estimates also incorporate post-pandemic survey data, giving policymakers a more accurate and current baseline.

That said, data improvements can make trends harder to compare across time. Some of the apparent progress may reflect better counting as much as genuine change — an honest caveat worth holding alongside the good news.

What policies are actually working

The World Bank research points to a consistent pattern among countries making the most progress: they invest in human capital. Health. Education. Nutrition. And they build institutions capable of sustaining those investments through economic shocks and climate disruptions.

Social protection programs — cash transfers, school feeding initiatives, and community health networks — have proven especially effective at shielding children when crises hit. The countries reducing extreme child poverty fastest are not waiting for growth to trickle down. They are actively building the conditions for children to survive and develop.

This mirrors patterns seen across other areas of human wellbeing. As WHO data on child health consistently shows, and as Brookings Institution research on social protection has documented, coordinated public investment produces measurable results over time. Extreme child poverty is not an immovable constant. It responds to policy. It responds to investment. And the last decade shows it can keep falling.

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