Data InsightsChina’s Great Leap Forward caused a dramatic spike in child deaths

China’s Great Leap Forward caused a dramatic spike in child deaths

Line chart of the estimated share of newborns who die before reaching the age of five from 1950 to 2023 where child mortality in China spikes to about 1 in 3 children during the Great Leap Forward (1958 to 1962), producing a noticeable uptick in global rates. After the 1960s both China and world rates decline steadily to low single digits by 2023.

Child mortality rates in China have fallen from more than 20% in 1950 to less than 1% today.

But this steady progress was interrupted in the late 1950s during the “Great Leap Forward”. This was China’s national plan to industrialize rapidly, but it resulted in widespread famine and economic turmoil.

As the chart shows, child mortality rates spiked in China over this period, with up to one in three children dying before reaching the age of five. This change was so dramatic that it is also clearly visible in the global trend.

This data comes from the UN’s World Population Prospects.

Explore child mortality for all countries in our interactive chart.

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