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10 poorest countries in the world

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jan 12, 2026, 18:00 IST
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1/11

10 poorest countries in the world

The world has never been richer. Technology is moving at an unprecedented pace, global trade uniting the most isolated corners of the world, and scientific advances offering longer, healthier lives. Yet for millions, what shapes their daily life is the grip of hunger and instability and uncertainty. Because the notion of “the poorest countries in the world” isn’t just numbers on a list; it’s about the kids growing up without access to schools, families living with no access to electricity, and more. According to Global Finance Magazine’s Economic Data ranking of the Poorest Countries in the World 2025, vast inequalities persist despite the world having enough resources to ensure a decent standard of living for all.
Measuring poverty is complicated. GDP per capita is one view, but by measuring purchasing power parity (PPP), you measure what people can actually afford. And even then, poverty seldom has a sole cause. Colonial legacies, corruption, frail institutions, conflict, climate shocks and debt that has reached the point of drowning tend to overlap, one wears down the strength of another year after year. The Covid-19 pandemic opened these fault lines with brutal force, throwing millions back into extreme poverty and reversing decades of progress. As the countries began to recover, inflation and war-driven supply shocks along with declining foreign aid exacerbated the strain.
In 2025, the contrast is stark: while people in the world’s richest countries enjoy average purchasing power above $118,000 a year, those in the poorest survive on roughly $1,600. These are the ten countries where that imbalance is felt most acutely.

2/11

South Sudan

Sitting at this position is South Sudan, the youngest, and poorest country on earth. Despite vast oil reserves, conflict, corruption and climate disasters dominate daily life. Inflation has wiped out savings, farming is repeatedly disrupted by violence and floods, and poverty has become nearly universal.

3/11

Burundi

Generations of poor governance, scarce resources and a civil war have caused long-lasting damage to the small Central African country. Subsistence farming is the norm for most, electricity is a rarity, and inflation has gone through the roof. Even small economic advances are difficult to bear out in the face of increased food prices and limited prospects.

4/11

Central African Republic

The Central African Republic abounds in diamonds, gold and timber, but few of its people reap the rewards. Large areas are still controlled by armed groups, and progress is fragile. There has been promising growth, but poverty is deeply rooted in everyday life.

5/11

Yemen

Yemen’s economy and infrastructure have been shattered by years of war. Oil revenues have plummeted, food prices have soared and hunger has become rampant. For millions, poverty is inextricable from conflict, and daily life is defined by shortages, displacement and uncertainty about peace.

6/11

Mozambique

Mozambique should be prospering on paper. It possesses natural gas, an extended coast line and strategic trade routes. In truth, progress has repeatedly been derailed by insurgency, disputed elections and climate disasters. Growth has slowed drastically, and the spoils from past boom times never really filtered down to ordinary people.

7/11

Malawi

Malawi’s economy relies heavily on rain-fed farming, making it especially vulnerable to the shocks of climate activity. And political calm does not mean economic security, as runaway inflation, plummeting currency values and food shortages press down on people’s lives. The soaring prices have made even the least complicated Malawian meals a luxury for many.

8/11

Democratic Republic of Congo

Few countries better epitomize the paradox of poverty as the DRC. Rich in the rare earth minerals key to the global green shift, its people are also desperately poor. Violence, corruption and weak infrastructure the past few decades have all meant wealth doesn’t translate into welfare. The opportunity is immense, but so too is the span between resources and actual prosperity.

9/11

Somalia

The narrative of Somalia is often characterized more by strife than resilience. Among droughts, floods and insurgency; reforms and regional trade initiatives are slowly emerging. Yet almost 70% of Somalis live beneath the international poverty line, and day-to-day existence is a ceaseless commerce with risk and climatic extremity.

10/11

Liberia

The oldest republic in Africa bears deep historical wounds, from civil wars to decades of economic neglect. The recent round of elections breathed fresh hope, and growth has returned amid the contraction of the pandemic era. Poverty rates have declined, but day-to-day life is still precarious, with high unemployment and minimal infrastructure preventing the country from staging a more robust recovery.

11/11

Madagascar

Madagascar is known for its biodiversity, though life for many here is marked by challenges. Political instability since independence has hindered progress, and the last estimate is that about three-quarters of its people live in poverty. Climate vulnerability makes everything more difficult. Drought kills crops and floods uproot families. Even when growth does Materialize on paper, it seldom trickles down to villages that rely almost entirely on precarious agriculture.
And it’s not that these countries have no potential. They are poor because history, politics and global shocks have conspired to make it nearly impossible for them to escape poverty. The numbers may vary from year to year, but for millions of people the stories behind them are painfully unchanging.

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Copyright © May 26, 2026, 12.20PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service