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Today
Data Insight
GDP per capita has doubled in all three Baltic states since 2000
Since 2000, GDP per capita has doubled in all three Baltic states: Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania (where it has nearly tripled).
Living conditions in these countries have improved more broadly. Poverty ratesare lower, and life satisfaction ishigher. Incomes have not just doubled in terms of GDP per capita;median incomes have also doubled.
Yesterday
Data updateWe’ve updated our charts with the latest data on natural disasters
Tracking the occurrence of natural disasters can save lives by helping countries prepare for future ones.
In our work on natural disasters, we visualize data fromEM-DAT, the most comprehensive international disaster database. EM-DAT is maintained by the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED), part of the University of Louvain (UCLouvain).
I’ve just updated our charts with the latest data on natural disasters. This data helps us track where disasters are happening; what types of events they are; their human and economic impacts; and how these trends are changing over time.
December 13
Data Insight
In most countries, imports from China account for less than 10% of GDP, even where China is the top partner
This Data Insight is the third of a three-part series on China’s role in global trade, drawing on new writing we added this week to ourTrade and Globalization topic page.
China isthe top source of imports for many countries. But this tells us only how China compares with other trading partners, not how large these imports are relative to the size of each country’s economy. That is what this map shows.
The map plots the total value of merchandise imports from China as a share of each importing country’s GDP. The data shows that Chinese imports are relatively small when compared with the overall size of the importing economy.
Take the Netherlands as an example: China is the country’sleading source of imports. But compared with the size of the whole Dutch economy, this is a comparatively small amount — about 10% as a share of GDP. And as the map shows, the Netherlands is at the high end, largely becauseit imports a lot overall.
In many countries, imports from China account for much less than 10% of GDP. There are a few reasons for this. First, even if China is the leading partner, most countries still import from a wide range of places. And second, in most countries, the economic value produced domesticallyis larger than the total value of imported goods.
December 12, 2025
Data UpdateWe’ve updated nearly 300 charts with the latest data to track progress on the UN Sustainable Development Goals
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are targets for global development that were adopted in 2015. All countries have agreed to work towards achieving them by 2030.
Our SDG Tracker presents data across all available indicators from the Our World in Data database, using official statistics from the UN and other international organizations.
This free, open-access information tracks global progress towards the SDGs and allows people worldwide to hold their governments accountable for achieving the agreed goals.
I recently completed our annual update of this large dataset, bringing nearly 300 charts up to date with the latest release.
December 11
Data Insight
Ethiopia imports much more from China than it used to — as do many other African countries
This Data Insight is the second of a three-part series on China’s role in global trade, drawing on new writing we added this week to ourTrade and Globalization topic page.
China’scentral role in merchandise trade is the result of a large change that has taken place in just a few decades. This change has been especially large in Africa and South America.
In 1990, most African countries imported mainly from Europe, and most South American imports came from North America. Today, Asia is the top source of importsfor both regions, primarily due to the rapid growth of trade with China.
The chart here focuses on Ethiopia, a country that illustrates this shift. Home to around130 million people, it is one of Africa’s largest countries and has experiencedrapid economic growth in recent decades.
In the early 1990s, over 40% of Ethiopia’s imports came from Europe, while very little came from China. Since then, the roles of China and Europe have almost reversed: imports from China now account for one-third of Ethiopia’s total imported goods.
December 09
Data Insight
China is the top import partner for most countries in the world
This Data Insight is the first of a three-part series on China’s role in global trade, drawing on new writing we added this week to ourTrade and Globalization topic page.
Over the past two decades, China’s role in global trade has expanded substantially. It has become a central hub, particularly through growing relationships with many lower and middle-income countries.
The map here shows how China ranks as a source of importsinto each country. A rank of 1 means that China is the largest source ofmerchandise goods (by value) that a country buys abroad.
In 2024, China was the top source of imported goods for around two-thirds of countries worldwide. This includes nearly all of Asia, much of Africa and Latin America, and parts of Europe.
In many countries,China has overtaken the United States as the largest origin of their imported goods. This shift has occurred relatively recently, mainly over the past two decades.
December 06
Data Insight
In these nine countries with the worst child mortality rates, about one in ten children dies before turning five
Despite the world’simmense progress against child mortality, in some of the poorest countries, one in ten children still dies. That’s a levellast seen in the richest countries in the middle of the 20th century.
The chart shows the nine countries, all located in Africa, where this is the reality today. In Niger, more than 11 out of every 100 children die before the age of five. In the European Union, the child mortality rate is more than twenty times lower.
December 05
Article
Top of the Charts: our most popular work in 2025
A look back at the most popular charts, articles, data insights, and more from Our World in Data in 2025.
Our World in Data team
December 04
Data Insight
Global chicken consumption per person has quadrupled since 1961
In 1961, around two chickens were slaughtered per person globally each year. As many countries grew richer — and richer countriestend to eat more meat — global demand for chicken increased.
Since then, the number of chickens slaughtered per person has quadrupled. On average, 9 chickens are killed each year for every person in the world. Chickens have also become muchheavier, so theamount of meat eaten in kilograms has grown even faster.
Life isshort and painful for many farmed animals. Global estimates suggest thatmostare raised in factory farms. In the United States, around99% of livestock comes from them.
December 03, 2025
AnnouncementHannah Ritchie received an award for her climate change communication from the UN office in the Czech Republic
Hannah Ritchie, our Deputy Editor and Science Outreach Lead, recently received an award for her climate change communication from the United Nations Information Centre Prague (UNIC) in the Czech Republic.
Hannah was awarded the honorary “Inspiration from Abroad”, for those living outside the Czech Republic who effectively communicate about climate change.
Hannah said:
I am honoured to accept this award for communicating climate change. The world is at a crucial point in its climate journey, when many of the solutions we need are already available, affordable and are gaining momentum. If we are to meet our climate goals, we cannot afford to stand still. We must ensure that these trends accelerate.
To do this, we need policymakers, businesses, financial institutions and, crucially, the general public to be attuned to such a transformation. Effective communication about climate change — and what can be done about it — is essential because it helps people understand the urgency of the situation, the costs, the trade-offs and the benefits it brings.
If we can reach the people who can make this change happen, we will be able to meet the challenges that lie ahead.
Congratulations, Hannah!
December 02
Data Insight
How many lives would be saved if Africa had other regions’ child mortality rates?
One of the starkest expressions of global inequality is a child’s chance of survival. In 2023,2.84 million children in Africa died before reaching their fifth birthday, giving the continent thehighest child mortality rate of any region (5.9%).
The chart above shows a simple hypothesis: how many more African children would reach the age of five if it had the same child mortality rates as other regions?
If conditions in Africa improved enough to match Asia’s current child mortality rate (2%), 1.9 million of these 2.84 million children would survive.
If the child mortality rate were to drop to the European rate (0.4%), then 2.64 million children would be saved each year.
December 01
Article
Almost all of the world’s mammal biomass is humans and livestock
Humans and livestock make up 95% of the world’s mammal biomass; wild mammals are just 5%.
Hannah Ritchie and Fiona Spooner
November 29
Data Insight
American homicide victims are mostly men, except when the killer is an intimate partner
Almost 20,000 Americans were murdered in 2023.
The chart shows the homicide rates among male and female victims. Men were 2.7 times more likely to die by homicide than women.
We can see that for men, most of these murders were committed by friends, neighbors, acquaintances, or strangers (shown as “Other” in the chart) rather than a partner or family member. The opposite is true for women: intimate partners are the biggest threat.
Because the risks are different, the most effective responses may differ too. For women, reducing intimate partner violence is a key priority. For men, prevention is more often tied to crime, gangs, and violence among acquaintances or strangers.
November 27
Data Insight
China’s fertility rate has fallen to one, continuing a long decline that began before and continued after the one-child policy
The 1970s were a decade shaped byfears about overpopulation. As the world’s most populous country, China was never far from the debate. In 1979, China designed itsone-child policy, which was rolled out nationally from 1980 to curb population growth by limiting couples to having just one child.
By this point, China’s fertility rate — the number of children per woman — had already fallen quickly in the early 1970s, as you can see in the chart.
While China’s one-child policy restricted many families, there were exceptions to the rule. Enforcement differed widely by province and between urban and rural areas. Many couples were allowed to have another baby if their first was a girl. Other couples paid a fine for having more than one. As a result, fertility rates never dropped close to one.
In the last few years, despite the end of the one-child policy in 2016 and the government encouraging larger families, fertility rateshave dropped to one. The fall in fertility today is driven less by policy andmore by social and economic changes.
This chart shows thetotal fertility rate, which is also affected by women delaying when they have children.Cohort fertility tells us how many children the average woman will actually have over her lifetime. In China, this cohort figure is likely higher than one, butstill low enough that the population will continue to shrink.
November 25, 2025
Data updateWe now show the latest GDP growth projections from the IMF
In the spring and fall each year, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) publishes itsWorld Economic Outlook. The latest report was published this past October.
The report helps us understand how economies around the world have grown over the past decades, and how they are projected to grow in the coming years.
You can see this in the chart for four of the world’s largest economies: the US, China, Germany, and Japan.
November 25
Data Insight
Seasonal flu kills about 700,000 people each year across the world
Seasonal influenza is sometimes seen as a mild illness, but it remains a major cause of death. In serious cases, it can cause deadly complications such as pneumonia, strokes, and heart attacks. Researchers estimate that the flu causes about 400,000 respiratory deaths and 300,000 cardiovascular deaths globally each year.
The flu is most dangerous for infants and older adults. The map here shows rates of respiratory deaths caused by the flu in adults aged 65 and over, averaged across 2002–2011 (excluding the 2009 Swine Flu pandemic).
The data shows that death rates tend to be higher in South America, Africa, and South Asia than in Europe or North America.
I come from South America, and I found this surprising: most of what I hear about flu deaths tends to come from richer countries in the Northern Hemisphere. But the map shows that the flu is also deadly, in some cases even more so, in other regions where poverty, worse underlying health, limited access to healthcare, and lower vaccination coverage contribute to higher mortality.
One explanation for my misperception might be that surveillance and reporting are stronger in the countries that I associate with deaths from flu. Another could also be age differences: people in high-income countriestend to be older, so their total number of deaths — the ones you actually hear about — may still be higher, even if rates are lower.
When you consider thetotal death toll, you realize that the numbers are very large on the whole. Recall that the map only includes respiratory deaths, so the overall mortality is actually higher if we include other flu-related complications like cardiovascular disease.
Even if you account for the uncertainty of estimates in low-income countries — due to limited testing and death registration — the overall pattern remains striking: seasonal influenza kills hundreds of thousands each year, with many of these deaths in South America, Africa, and South Asia.
November 24
Article
Just ten species make up almost half the weight of all wild mammals on Earth
A small number of species dominate the distribution of wild mammal biomass.
Hannah Ritchie and Fiona Spooner
November 22
Data Insight
Afghans report the lowest life satisfaction in the world
Measuring happiness is difficult, but one way to understand how satisfied people are with their lives is to simply ask them.
Self-reported life satisfaction is one key metric that researchers often rely on. It asks people to imagine a hypothetical ladder, where the best possible life for them is a 10, and the worst possible life is a 0. They then have to place their current position on the ladder.
The chart shows the three-year average scores from 2022 to 2024 for the four countries with the highest ratings and the four with the lowest.
Afghans reported the lowest life satisfaction in the world, far below any other country.
This incredibly low score has been replicated in other studies. Researchersrecently compared Afghans’ life satisfaction with international datasets dating back to 1946 and found it was the lowest ever recorded. Two-thirds gave a score of 0 or 1 on the 10-point scale.
November 20
Data Insight
Women are more likely to be victims of partner homicide
Women are much more likely than men to be killed by their intimate partner. The chart shows this across nine OECD countries in 2023.
These deaths are rarely isolated events.Research shows that partner homicides are usually the endpoint of a long pattern of coercive control — behaviors such as surveillance, isolation, intimidation, restrictions on daily life, and physical violence.
Recognizing both the gender imbalance and its roots in coercive control can help focus support services, encourage family and friends to act sooner, and increase social pressure against abusive behavior.
While women face the highest risk from intimate partners, men make up about80% of homicide victims globally. The gender split in partner homicides is therefore a striking exception.
November 17
Data Insight
Growth of global GDP per capita has been remarkably steady over the past three decades
This chart shows global GDP per capita, adjusted for inflation. Looking at the world economy from this perspective, it is the steadiness of this change that stands out to me. Average incomes per person have risen at a fairly constant pace of roughly 2% per year, interrupted only by the 2008–09 financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic.
One reason this is noteworthy, in my view, is that national economies changed a lot during the same period.Some economies slowed, many others grew, and more generally, some major political shifts took place. Yet when all of this is aggregated, the global average followed a remarkably smooth upward track.
The line in the chart ends in 2024, so it does not yet capture more recent developments. But a few recent articles, such asthis one from The Economist, look at data for 2025 and point to the same stability.
Past trends may not continue in the future. But this data reminds us that global economic aggregates can develop more steadily than the headlines might make us think.
November 17
Article
The end of progress against extreme poverty?
In the last three decades, the world has made progress against extreme poverty faster than ever before. But unless the poorest economies start growing, this period of progress against the worst form of poverty is over.
Max Roser