9-month-old Hafsat Abubakar is held by her mother, Safiya Ibrahim, at their home in the Sarkin Adar Gidan Igwai neighbourhood of Sokoto. Hafsat’s older brother, Ismail, sits with them.

The world's worst

child health crisis

is malnutrition.

No country, however rich,

is immune.

More than

400 million

children

aren’t getting the

nutrients they need

to grow and thrive.

Climate change

is making it

even harder

to solve.

We have new tools

and promising

research to ensure

kids get healthier

even as the world

gets hotter.

A vendor arranges her fruit stand at Karatina market in Karatina, Kenya.

The Race to Nourish
a Warming World

The world's worst child health crisis is malnutrition. Climate change is making it even harder to solve. To protect the world’s children from hunger’s worst effects, we must invest in global health.

by Bill Gates

Co-chair, Gates Foundation

When historians write about the first quarter of the 21st century, I think they may sum it up this way: Twenty years of unprecedented progress followed by five years of stagnation.

This is true for nearly every issue the Gates Foundation works on, from poverty reduction to primary school enrollment. But nowhere is the contrast more stark or tragic than in health.

Between 2000 and 2020, the world witnessed a “global health boom.” Child mortality fell by 50%. In 2000, more than 10 million children died every year, and now that number is down to fewer than five million children. The prevalence of the world's deadliest infectious diseases fell by half, too. Best of all, the progress was happening in regions where the disease burden had been the highest. Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia saw the most improvement.

This health boom had many causes. A new generation of political leaders embraced humanitarianism. Hundreds of thousands of health workers fanned out across the globe, bringing the latest medicine to places that doctors had rarely visited. But one often overlooked factor was a small—yet crucial—increase in funding.

Starting in 2000, the world's wealthiest countries began steadily increasing their funding to supplement low-income countries as they increased their own investments in health. This funding fueled the work of organizations like Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, which gave poorer nations access to life-saving vaccines, drugs, and other medical breakthroughs.

Aid is relatively small. By 2020, wealthy countries were spending less than one quarter of 1% of their budgets on aid. That’s an average of $10.47 on health per person in the poorest countries. But that $10.47 made a remarkable difference.

Then COVID-19 hit, and progress came to a screeching halt.

Stalled financing threatens decades of health progress

Legend
DAH, excluding COVID-19 funding
DAH projection
Child mortality

Development assistance for health (DAH) (2022 $USD)

A line graph showing the decline in child deaths from 2000 to 2030, which halved from 2000 to 2019, stalled from 2020 to 2023, and is expected to decline up to 2030. This is juxtaposed by a bar chart showing an increase in development assistance for health from 2000 to 2019, with slower growth from 2020 to 2023, and stalling up to 2030. 2000 2020 2024 2030 $0 $10bn $20bn $30bn $40bn $50bn $60bn
Annualized growth: 6.6%
2.3%
-0.2%

Development assistance for health is provided by governments and private organizations in high-income countries to low- and middle-income countries.

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Today, the world is contending with more challenges than at any point in my adult life: inflation, debt, new wars. Unfortunately, aid isn’t keeping pace with these needs, particularly in the places that need it the most.

For instance, more than half of all child deaths still occur in sub-Saharan Africa. Since 2010, the percentage of the world’s poor living in the region has also increased by more than 20 percentage points. Despite this, during the same period, the share of total foreign aid to Africa has dropped from nearly 40% to only 25%—the lowest percentage in 20 years. Fewer resources mean more children will die of preventable causes.

The global health boom is over. But for how long?

That's the question I have been wrestling with for the past five years: Will we look back on this period as the end of a golden era? Or is it just a brief intermission before another global health boom begins?

I’m still an optimist. I think we can give global health a second act—even in a world where competing challenges require governments to stretch their budgets.

To do this, we’ll need a two-pronged approach. First, the world has to recommit to the work that drove the progress in the early 2000s, especially investments in crucial vaccines and medicines. They’re still saving millions of lives each year, and we can't afford to backslide.

But we also need to look forward. The R&D pipeline is brimming with powerful—and surprisingly cost-effective—new breakthroughs. Now we just need to put them to work fighting the world’s most pervasive health crises. And it starts with good nutrition.

Every now and then, somebody will ask me what I would do if I had a magic wand. For years, I’ve given the same answer: I would solve malnutrition.

This summer, UNICEF released its first report on child food poverty. The findings were stark. Two-thirds of the world’s children—more than 400 million kids—are not getting enough nutrients to grow and thrive, putting them at higher risk for malnutrition. In 2023, the WHO estimated that 148 million children experienced stunting, and 45 million children experienced wasting—the most severe forms of chronic and acute malnutrition. It prevents them from growing to their full potential—and, in the worst cases, from growing up at all.

When a child dies, half the time the underlying cause is malnutrition.

And now a significant headwind is making malnutrition harder to solve: climate change. We worked with our partners at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation to better understand how difficult the headwind is:

Between 2024 and 2050, climate change will mean 40 million additional children will be stunted, and 28 million additional children will be wasted.

It’s an important projection, and it should inform where country leaders devote their aid money to reverse the current trends and the growing burden of malnutrition.

Obviously, fighting climate change is crucial. But what these data show is that the health crisis and the climate crisis are the same thing in the poorest countries near the equator. In fact, the best way to fight the impacts of climate change is by investing in nutrition.

Nations can’t grow if their people can’t

Most people associate malnutrition with hunger. We’ve all seen the awful photos of starving children. That’s the most visible kind of malnutrition—but it’s not the only kind.

Malnutrition also includes what doctors call “hidden hunger.” Kids can be eating enough calories and still not getting the right nutrients. When this happens to very young children, it interrupts the development of their bodies and brains. The effects are irreversible.

With most serious childhood diseases, the kids who survive eventually grow up fine. But the kids who survive malnutrition never truly escape it. It follows them to school. A child who has a severe brush with malnutrition before the age of three will complete five fewer years of schooling than well-nourished kids. And the malnourished kids who do remain in school tend to do poorly and take longer to complete each grade than their peers.

As these kids become adults, it continues to haunt them. Studies show that people who went hungry as kids earn 10% less over their lifetimes and are 33% less likely to escape poverty.

Nations can’t grow if their people can’t. The economic costs of undernutrition are significant: It is estimated that every year, the cost of undernutrition is US$3 trillion in productivity loss because malnutrition has stunted people’s physical and cognitive abilities. In low-income countries, that loss ranges from 3 to 16 percent (or more) of GDP. It’s the equivalent of a permanent 2008-level global recession.

Today, one in every five of the world’s children suffers from stunting, and climate change threatens to increase that number. We should ask: What will that mean for the global economy in 20 years when these children are in the prime of their working lives?

Few economists think of the malnutrition rate as a critical economic data point—but they should start. Nutritional deficits quickly translate into financial deficits.

We have new tools to help solve malnutrition

By now, it’s clear: Malnutrition makes every forward step our species wants to take heavier and harder.

But the inverse is also true. If we solve malnutrition, we make it easier to solve every other problem. We solve extreme poverty. Vaccines are more effective. And deadly diseases like malaria and pneumonia become far less fatal.

That’s why I believe we can jumpstart a second global health boom by getting kids the right nutrients.

This is especially true now, because we have more tools to ensure kids gets healthier even as the world gets hotter.

The science of nutrition has experienced a renaissance over the past decade. Animal scientists have discovered how to breed more productive livestock, while food scientists have found new ways to fortify more nutrients into the staples of people’s diets—like salt, flour, and bouillon cubes. Doctors are even beginning to unlock the mysteries of the microbiome, the teeming universe of bacteria that lives inside our digestive tracts.

As you read on, you’ll hear from people on the front line of nourishing people around the world. Together, they’re showing us how we can jumpstart another golden age for health: with a lot of grit, creativity, and enormous generosity toward their fellow human beings.

Bill Gates: Jumpstarting a global health boom starts with nutrition.

Bill Gates

We have the tools to

solve malnutrition

—and make people

healthier and more

climate-resilient.

Jashodaben serves lunch to children at the creche she operates and manages in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India.

A Recipe for Progress:
4 Solutions to Nourish Our Planet

No other global health problem requires a larger-scale solution than malnutrition. These proven solutions can make a difference now.

One of the hardest things to do in global health is scaling a solution.

No global health problem requires a larger-scale solution than malnutrition. Every single person on the planet needs to eat a healthy, nutritious diet every day.

Brazil, India, Kenya, Rwanda, and dozens of other emerging nations have leaned into this challenge. They’ve found gaps in their food systems and are repairing them to deliver the right macro- and micronutrients to as much of the population as possible.

For these countries, building a more nutritious food system produces a double benefit. It lowers the malnutrition rate, improving health outcomes. It also can lead to a remarkable amount of economic growth.

6x more

Milk produced by cows

New agricultural technologies are being developed to increase the amount of milk that cows produce in Kenya.

109 million

Stunting cases prevented

Improving dairy productivity and supply in just five countries—Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Nigeria, and Tanzania—could prevent millions of cases of childhood stunting between 2020 and 2050.

16.6 million

Anemia cases prevented per year

In Nigeria, fortifying bouillon cubes wouldn't just prevent anemia, it would also avert more than 11,000 deaths from neural tube defects.

5,000

Lives saved each year

Ethiopia is exploring adding folic acid to iodized salt. This “double-fortified” salt could eliminate nearly 75% of all deaths and stillbirths due to neural tube defects each year.

500,000

Lives saved

If low- and middle-income countries adopted Multiple Micronutrient Supplements, the world’s most complete prenatal vitamins, almost half a million lives could be saved by 2040.

$2.60

For an entire pregnancy

Now, throughout the world, it costs only a few dollars to take MMS, which contains 15 vitamins and minerals proven to significantly reduce the risk of adverse birth outcomes.

Ensuring more productive cows and safer milk

Milk is a nutrient-rich food that addresses many of the nutritional deficits children face, including calcium, vitamins (including A and B12), protein, and healthy fats—it makes them healthier and even more climate-resilient over the long term.

But producing enough of it, ensuring it is affordable, and preventing it from spoiling remains a challenge in low-income regions.

But new agriculture technologies are changing that. Some technologies use DNA and data to select cows that give birth to more productive offspring. Others help farmers produce more high-quality forage or repurpose crop waste for nutritious cow feed. As a result, Kenyan cows are now producing 6 to 10 times more milk than before. That’s more milk to drink at home and more income for dairy farmers and vendors, most of whom are women.

It’s also better health for children: New analysis from the International Food Policy Research Institute shows that improving dairy productivity and consumption in five countries—Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Nigeria, and Tanzania—could prevent as many as 109 million cases of childhood stunting by 2050.

And training is an essential part. Programs like Livestock Enhancement and Advancement Programme (LEAP) and MoreMilk are helping dairy farmers and market sellers learn and follow best practices for safe storage and handling.

Sushama Das, in Astaranga Village, Odisha State, India, is a beneficiary of improved access to government subsidies, training, and services that have helped her family expand their dairy farm and earn more money.

Sushama Das

Odisha, India

Coletta Kemboi on her farm in Eldoret City, Kenya.

Coletta Kemboi

Maili Nne, Kenya

Fortifying the global pantry against micronutrient deficiencies

Large-scale food fortification is an old technology—but we’re unlocking new ways of using it to increase micronutrients in the food found in pantries all over the world.

After all, micronutrient deficiencies have an outsized impact on health. For example, vitamin A deficiencies are the leading cause of childhood blindness, while folate deficiencies are the leading cause of neural tube defects.

In the United States and Switzerland, iodized salt has been sold in supermarkets since the 1920s, which has led to the virtual elimination of iodine deficiency and the improvement of IQ scores. Leveraging that success, Ethiopia is now exploring adding another critical nutrient, folic acid, to iodized salt. They are testing a way to produce this “double-fortified” salt. This pioneering approach holds the potential to eliminate half of all deaths and stillbirths due to neural tube defects, up to 5,000 per year in Ethiopia, and helping to reduce anemia up to 4% across the country.

And now leaders at the Nigerian Ministry of Health and Social Welfare are leading a large-scale effort to fortify bouillon, already a common item in Nigerian kitchens.

Headshot of Ladidi Bako-Aiyegbusi, director of nutrition at the Nigerian Ministry of Health and Social Welfare.

Ladidi Bako-Aiyegbusi

Nigeria

Expanding access to better prenatal vitamins

Healthy diets are crucial for good nutrition. But, in different stages of life with different needs, they’re not always sufficient. Doctors know that mothers need extra nourishment during pregnancy and the critical days that follow to stay healthy and give their children the best start in life.

These increased needs make it difficult for pregnant women all over the world to consume the full range of necessary nutrients, especially in countries where healthy foods are out of budget or out of reach.

One solution is the United Nations International Multiple Micronutrient Antenatal Preparation Multiple Micronutrient Supplements—the world’s most complete prenatal vitamin. It contains 15 vitamins and minerals proven to significantly reduce the risk of adverse birth outcomes. It is more effective and powerful than the iron and folic acid supplements that many women typically receive in low- and middle-income countries. If all low- and middle-income countries switched to MMS, which costs only $2.60 for an entire pregnancy, almost half a million lives would be saved and 25 million babies would have improved birth outcomes by 2040.

Headshot of Dr. Sabin Nsanzimana, Minister of Health of Rwanda.

Dr. Sabin Nsanzimana

Rwanda

Financing progress through the Child Nutrition Fund

Although all of the interventions we’ve covered have life-saving potential on a global scale, without resources and extensible plans for implementation behind them, they would be little more than good ideas.

That’s why the Gates Foundation worked with UNICEF and other partners to launch the Child Nutrition Fund—a new financing mechanism designed to bring these innovative solutions to life and transform the way the world addresses child malnutrition.

Before the Child Nutrition Fund, there was no dedicated platform to coordinate efforts to address child malnutrition, to encourage domestic funding, or to support local production of the nutrient-rich foods and food supplements children need most.

The Child Nutrition Fund provides solutions to all three of these problems, in one place. And we know it will be effective, because we’ve already seen these financing mechanisms in action—the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria is a great example. It is one of the fastest-scaling, most effective institutions ever created. The interventions it has funded and deployed have saved nearly 60 million lives.

Now, the Child Nutrition Fund is using a similar approach to attack child malnutrition, head-on, in partnership with countries around the world.

Headshot of Víctor Aguayo, Global Director, Child Nutrition and Development at UNICEF.

Dr. Víctor Aguayo

UNICEF

In rich countries

and poor ones,

the future of human

progress depends

on what’s happening

in our guts.

Close up mom carrying baby boy in fabric sling.

The Microbiome:
The Next Nutrition Frontier

A final word from Bill Gates

“A pregnant woman eats for two” is a common saying. But doctors have realized it needs updating.

A pregnant woman is actually eating for three ... trillion: herself, her child, and the vast network of microorganisms that lives inside her digestive tract.

Around 15 years ago, researchers began to suspect that the bacteria that live in your gut—your microbiome—may play a crucial role in health after noticing that oral childhood vaccines like polio weren’t as effective in places with high rates of malnutrition.

A series of succeeding studies revealed the fundamental problem: When undernourished children are exposed to too many pathogens in their environment, they can get what we call “environmental enteric dysfunction.”

To oversimplify a very complex set of processes: Their guts become inflamed, their intestines get blunted, and they struggle to absorb nutrients. In other words, a child with an unhealthy microbiome can eat a full and healthy diet—but still be undernourished.

This discovery has changed the way the Gates Foundation thinks about nutrition. We still support work in agricultural development and a diversity of nutritious, affordable food for a healthy diet because making sure there is enough food to eat has to be the starting point. But it’s no longer the end point. Today, we are also thinking about how to improve gut health to make sure children can absorb nutrients, develop strong immune systems, and grow as they should to thrive.

Just a few years ago, researchers hoped to identify a gold-standard microbiome: the precise contents of a healthy gut that applied to everyone, everywhere. We know now that what we really need to understand is how these metabolic networks function and design diets to complement and feed our gut bacteria. For example, we know that certain locally appropriate therapeutic foods, like specific sugars in green bananas in Bangladesh, appear to work especially well because they feed not only the child, but also the bacteria in their gut.

There is still so much we don’t know about these networks, but the good news is that they might be relatively easy to understand in children relative to adults.

Compared to the adult microbiome, which contains 100 trillion cells, the infant microbiome starts out simple. We now know that early-in-life microbes need to colonize the gut in a very specific sequence to pave the way for healthy growth, development, and immune function. During this early life stage, the infant microbiome is more easily molded. And once it sets, it impacts us for the rest of our lives.

This research isn’t just useful for addressing malnutrition in low-income nations. It has huge implications for the overnutrition problem in wealthy countries. In the United States, an estimated 60% of the population is overweight or obese, often because of high-fat, high-sugar diets. These diets alter the biology of the gut and lead to inflammation.

In rich countries and poor ones, we’re realizing that the future of human progress depends on what’s happening in our guts.

It’s a thrilling time to be standing at the frontier of nutrition. We’re on the cusp of unlocking not only a deeper understanding of the microbiome—but with it, solutions that could forever change how the world treats malnutrition, our most pervasive health crisis. But this will only be possible if the world commits to funding the progress of the future today.

That starts with a commitment that no child should die before their fifth birthday. That’s a commitment the world has made before. Halving the rate of under-5 child mortality was perhaps humanity’s most important achievement—and we can do it again, if countries around the world do three things.

First, they must maintain their global health funding.
Second, they must commit to fully replenishing Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria—organizations that have the hard-earned know-how to distribute vaccines, drugs, and other medical breakthroughs to the people who need them most.
And third, they must immediately address the growing threat of child malnutrition. We have a new funding mechanism, the Child Nutrition Fund, that has great potential to focus resources where they are needed most.

If we do these three things, we won’t just usher in a new global health boom and save millions of lives—we’ll also prove that humanity can still rise to meet our greatest challenges.

A Special Note from Marcus Samuelsson, Award-Winning Chef and Philanthropist

Marcus Samuelsson in his restaurant, Red Rooster.
© Samuelsson Group, New York City, NY

I was born in Ethiopia, in a small farming village called Abrugandana. When I was two, a tuberculosis outbreak hit. My mother got sick, I got sick, and so did my sister Fantaye.

When our health took a turn for the worse, the three of us made the 75-mile journey to the hospital in Addis Ababa, on foot. I don’t know how my mother managed to get us there while barely able to breathe—but I do know that she never left the hospital alive. And I also know that Fantaye’s and my survival was a miracle, especially because tuberculosis was not the only thing ravaging my body.

Long before the outbreak, Ethiopia had been plagued by malnutrition. And because we were extremely poor, without access to the milk, food, or nutrients my growing body needed, I was not immune. At 2 1/2 years old, I weighed just 22 pounds—the average size of a 12-month-old child.

Today, there are still millions of malnourished children around the world, just like I was. But I was lucky. Because I was given a rare chance at a better life—and a better, more nutritious diet.

After being adopted by two incredible parents, my sister and I were raised in Sweden. In our house, taste and nutrition went hand in hand. And over time, I grew to understand that it’s not just about how much you eat, it’s also about what you eat.

That knowledge formed the foundation of my personal journey through food. It’s why, in my restaurants, our menus feature locally grown and nutrient-rich ingredients. And it’s why I believe my responsibility as a chef is bigger than just making good food. It’s also about giving voice to the idea that having access to a nutritious diet is a basic human right.

For millions of children around the world, that right is being denied. They are not getting the nutrients they need to grow, develop, and thrive—a reality that will only get worse as the effects of climate change intensify. That is both an outrage and a tragedy, because malnutrition is so thoroughly preventable.

That’s why I’m grateful that The Gates Foundation is confronting this crisis head-on. The work they’re doing is critical. It will help ensure that millions of children can unlock their full potential—just as I was able to.

Explore the data

Each year, Goalkeepers share the latest estimates on 18 indicators, ranging from poverty to education. These indicators help us understand the progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals—where innovation and investment are creating bright spots, and where we’re collectively falling short. These data remind us that progress is possible but not inevitable.

But with just six years remaining, the world is off track. Urgent action is needed to meet the SDG targets and create a more equitable and safe future for all by 2030.

No Poverty

Poverty

Population below the international poverty line
Line chart showing the percentage of the global population living below the international poverty line (US$2.15/day), also known as extreme poverty, from 1981 to 2022. Rates of extreme poverty have declined from 44% in 1981 to 9% in 2022. 1981 2022 2022 8.95% 8.95%
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No Poverty

Poverty

SDG Target 1.1

Eradicate extreme poverty for all people everywhere.

Zero Hunger

Stunting

Stunting among children under age 5
Line chart showing the global prevalence of stunting among children under age five from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. In 2023, an estimated 24% of children under 5 are stunted; at the current pace of progress, the 2030 projection estimates that 23% of children will be stunted—missing the target of 15% by 2030. 1990 2023 2030 Target 24% 24% 15%21% 23% 25%
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Zero Hunger

Stunting

SDG Target 2.2

End all forms of malnutrition, including achieving, by 2025, the internationally agreed-upon targets on stunting and wasting in children under 5.

Zero Hunger

Agriculture

Rate of income growth of small-scale producers, 2014–2019
Bar chart showing the average annual income growth rate from agriculture for smallholder food producers in 14 selected countries. 0.5x 1.5x 2x Target 1x No growth 1x No growth 1x No growth 1x No growth
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Zero Hunger

Agriculture

SDG Target 2.3

Double the agricultural productivity and incomes of smallholder food producers, in particular women, indigenous peoples, family farmers, pastoralists, and fishers.

Good Health & Well-Being

Maternal Mortality

Maternal deaths per 100,000 live births
Line chart showing the global maternal mortality ratio from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. In 2023, an estimated 139 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births occurred; at the current pace of progress, the 2030 projection estimates 125 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births—missing the target of 70 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births by 2030. 1990 2023 2030 Target 139 139 70101 125 174
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Good Health & Well-Being

Maternal Mortality

SDG Target 3.1

Reduce the global maternal mortality ratio to less than 70 per 100,000 live births.

Good Health & Well-Being

Under-5 Mortality

Under-5 deaths per 1,000 live births
Line chart showing the global under-5 mortality rate from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. In 2023, an estimated 36 under-5 deaths per 1,000 live births occurred; the 2030 projection estimates 31 under-5 deaths per 1,000 live births—missing the target of 25 under-5 deaths per 1,000 live births by 2030. 1990 2023 2030 Target 36 36 2527 31 35
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Good Health & Well-Being

Under-5 Mortality

SDG Target 3.2

End preventable deaths of children under 5 years of age, with all countries aiming to reduce under-5 mortality to at least as low as 25 per 1,000 live births.

Good Health & Well-Being

Neonatal Mortality

Neonatal deaths per 1,000 live births
Line chart showing the global neonatal mortality rate from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. In 2023, an estimated 17 neonatal deaths per 1,000 live births occurred; the 2030 projection estimates 15 neonatal deaths per 1,000 live births—missing the target of 12 neonatal deaths per 1,000 live births by 2030. 1990 2023 2030 Target 17 17 1213 15 17
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Good Health & Well-Being

Neonatal Mortality

SDG Target 3.2

End preventable deaths of newborns, with all countries aiming to reduce neonatal mortality to at least as low as 12 per 1,000 live births.

Good Health & Well-Being

HIV

New cases of HIV per 1,000 people
Line chart showing the new global cases of HIV per 1,000 people from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. The 2023 global estimate is 0.23 new cases of HIV per 1,000 people; the 2030 projection estimates 0.21 new cases of HIV per 1,000 people—missing the target of 0.02 new cases of HIV per 1,000 people. 1990 2023 2030 Target 0.23 0.23 0.020.16 0.21 0.23
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Good Health & Well-Being

HIV

SDG Target 3.3

End the epidemics of AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and neglected tropical diseases and combat hepatitis, water-borne diseases, and other communicable diseases.

Good Health & Well-Being

Tuberculosis

New cases of tuberculosis per 100,000 people
Line chart showing new global cases of tuberculosis per 100,000 people from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. The 2023 global estimate is 119 new cases of tuberculosis per 100,000 people; at the current pace of progress, the 2030 projection estimates 107 new cases of tuberculosis per 100,000 people—missing the target of 20 new cases per 100,000 people. 1990 2023 2030 Target 119 119 2095 107 120
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Good Health & Well-Being

Tuberculosis

SDG Target 3.3

End the epidemics of AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and neglected tropical diseases and combat hepatitis, water-borne diseases, and other communicable diseases.

Good Health & Well-Being

Malaria

New cases of malaria per 1,000 people
Line chart showing new global cases of malaria per 1,000 people from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. The 2023 global estimate is 32 new cases of malaria per 1,000 people; the 2030 projection estimates new cases will remain unchanged until 2030—missing the target of nine new cases per 1,000 people. 1990 2023 2030 Target 32 32 925 31 35
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Good Health & Well-Being

Malaria

SDG Target 3.3

End the epidemics of AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and neglected tropical diseases and combat hepatitis, water-borne diseases, and other communicable diseases.

Good Health & Well-Being

Neglected Tropical Diseases

Prevalence of 15 NTDs per 100,000 people
Line chart showing the global prevalence of 15 neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) per 100,000 people from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. The 2023 global estimate is 13,277 cases of 15 NTDs per 100,000 people; the 2030 projection estimates 10,604 cases of 15 NTDs per 100,000 people. 1990 2023 2030 13.3k 13.3k 9.2k 10.6k 13.4k
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Good Health & Well-Being

Neglected Tropical Diseases

SDG Target 3.3

End the epidemics of AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) and combat hepatitis, water-borne diseases, and other communicable diseases.

Good Health & Well-Being

Family Planning

Percentage of family planning needs met with modern methods
Line chart showing the global percentage of women of reproductive age (ages 15 to 49), who have their need for family planning satisfied with modern methods from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. The 2023 global estimate is 78% of women have their need for family planning satisfied; the 2030 projection estimates the percentage of women who have their need for family planning met increases slightly to 79% by 2030—missing the target of ensure all women of reproductive age have their need for family planning satisfied with modern methods. 1990 2023 2030 Target 78% 78% 76% 79% 81% 100%
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Good Health & Well-Being

Family Planning

SDG Target 3.7

Ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health care services, including those for family planning.

Good Health & Well-Being

Universal Health Coverage

UHC effective coverage index score
Line chart showing the global performance score of the universal health coverage (UHC) effective coverage index from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. The 2023 global estimate is a performance score of 61; the 2030 projection estimates a performance score of 63 by 2030—missing the target of 100. 1990 2023 2030 Target 61 61 61 63 65 100
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Good Health & Well-Being

Universal Health Coverage

SDG Target 3.8

Achieve universal health coverage for all.

Good Health & Well-Being

Smoking

Prevalence among people ages 15 and older
Line chart showing global age-standardized smoking prevalence among people ages 15 and older from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. In 2023, smoking prevalence among people ages 15 and older was 18%; the 2030 projection estimates 17% smoking prevalence among people ages 15 and older. 1990 2023 2030 18% 18% 16% 17% 18%
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Good Health & Well-Being

Smoking

SDG Target 3.A

Strengthen the implementation of the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in all countries.

Good Health & Well-Being

Vaccines

Coverage of DTP (third dose)
Line chart showing the global coverage for diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTP) third-dose vaccine from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. The 2023 global estimate is 80% coverage. At the current pace of progress, the 2030 projection estimates 84% coverage by 2030. 1990 2023 2030 80% 80% 74% 84% 93%
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Good Health & Well-Being

Vaccines

SDG Target 3.B

Support the research and development of vaccines and medicines for the communicable and noncommunicable diseases that primarily affect developing countries and provide access to affordable essential medicines and vaccines.

Quality Education

Education

Children who cannot read and understand a simple text by age 10
Line chart showing global and regional rates of learning poverty for pre-pandemic years 2015 and 2019, with post-pandemic simulations for the year 2022. Pre-pandemic, learning poverty rates in low- and middle-income countries were 53% in 2015 and 57% in 2019. Simulations for 2022 estimate learning poverty rates in low- and middle-income countries have increased to 70%. 2015 2019 2022 48% 48% 51.9% 51.9% 62.4%64.3%65.5%
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Quality Education

Education

SDG Target 4.1

Ensure that all girls and boys complete free, equitable, and quality primary and secondary education leading to relevant and effective learning outcomes.

Gender Equality

Gender Equality

SDG Gender Index score
Line chart showing the global SDG Gender Index score from 2015 to 2022 with projections to 2030. In 2022, the score was 66, with a 2030 projection of 69—with global gender equality only achieved in the 22nd century. 2015 2019 2022 2030 64 65 66 69
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Gender Equality

Gender Equality

SDG Target 5

Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.

Clean Water and Sanitation

Sanitation

Population using safely managed sanitation
Line chart showing the global proportion of the population using safely managed sanitation from 1990 to 2023, with projected scenarios to 2030. The 2023 global estimate is 63% of the population using safely managed sanitation; the 2030 projection estimates 68% of the population using safely managed sanitation—missing the target of 100%. 1990 2023 2030 Target 63% 63% 66% 68% 70% 100%
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Clean Water and Sanitation

Sanitation

SDG Target 6.2

Achieve access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene for all and end open defecation, paying special attention to the needs of women and girls and those in vulnerable situations.

Decent Work and Economic Growth

Inclusive Financial Systems

Adult financial account ownership
Line chart showing the percentage of adults (ages 15 and older) with an account at a financial institution or with a mobile-money service provider, aggregated by country-level income and gender, for the years 2011, 2014, 2017, and 2021. Global estimates for account ownership by adults increased from 51% in 2011 to 76% in 2021. 2011 2014 2017 2021 51% 62% 69% 76%
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Decent Work and Economic Growth

Inclusive Financial Systems

SDG Target 8.10

Strengthen the capacity of domestic financial institutions to encourage and expand access to banking, insurance, and financial services for all.

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