The poorest countries in the world in 2025: mapping the lowest-income economies

The year 2025 highlights staggering economic disparities worldwide. Fifty nations with extremely low incomes face major development challenges. These poorest countries in the world have an average per capita income below $2,900 annually, revealing vast gaps compared to developed nations.

Sub-Saharan Africa: the epicenter of economic poverty

The African continent dominates this list of the poorest countries. South Sudan ranks last globally with only $251 GDP per capita, followed by Yemen ($417) and Burundi ($490). The Central African Republic ($532), Malawi ($580), and Madagascar ($595) complete this critical trio.

Most of the 50 countries at the bottom of the economic ranking are located in Sub-Saharan Africa. Sudan ($625), Mozambique ($663), and the Democratic Republic of the Congo ($743) illustrate the extent of the regional economic crisis. Structural factors—armed conflicts, political instability, weak infrastructure—explain why this region concentrates the world’s poorest countries.

South Sudan at the top: less than $300 per capita

South Sudan remains the country with the lowest GDP per capita worldwide. Since its independence in 2011, the nation has experienced civil wars, collapsing oil prices, and chronic macroeconomic instability. These factors have reduced the average wealth per person to catastrophic levels.

Other African nations complete the top 10 with the lowest incomes: Niger ($751), Somalia ($766), Nigeria ($807), and Liberia ($908). These figures reflect fragile economies facing multidimensional challenges: institutional precariousness, limited resources, explosive demographics.

South and Southeast Asia: persistent poverty despite growth

Despite high economic growth rates in recent years, several Asian countries remain among the poorest in terms of income per capita. Myanmar ($1,177), Tanzania ($1,280), Tajikistan ($1,432), and Nepal ($1,458) illustrate this paradox.

Timor-Leste ($1,491), Cambodia ($2,870), and India ($2,878) complete the Asian contingent. These economies combine very large populations, a predominantly agricultural sector, and insufficient investments in human capital. Their per capita incomes remain depressed despite regional growth dynamics.

Small island and fragile economies

Unexpectedly, micro-island states appear on this list. Solomon Islands ($2,379), Kiribati ($2,414), and Haiti ($2,672) demonstrate the vulnerability of small economies to external shocks.

These nations suffer from geographic isolation, limited natural resources, monocultural economies, and dependence on imports. Haiti, marked by decades of political instability and structural inequalities, is among the poorest countries in the Americas with a per capita income of only $2,672.

Common issues of very low-income economies

All these countries share similar characteristics: fragile governance, limited access to education, failing infrastructure, and dependence on extractive or agricultural sectors. Conflicts, political instability, and climate change continually worsen their economic situations.

The gap between South Sudan ($251) and India ($2,878)—a tenfold difference—symbolizes the vast global inequalities. Reducing these disparities requires massive investments in infrastructure, education, and institutional stability to transform the world’s poorest countries.

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