December 06, 2024
Around the world, 10 cows, 47 pigs, and 2,400 chickens get killed for meat every second.
Recent estimates suggest that 99% of livestock in the United States is factory-farmed. Globally, the majority of animals are raised on factory farms.
For many of these animals, life is short and painful.
Newborn calves are typically taken from their mothers shortly after birth, causing distress for both. Castrating and cutting off piglets' tails without anesthesia is common practice. Chickens grow so quickly that after six weeks, many struggle to stand for long and spend most of their time lying down. These animals require high doses of antibiotics to survive in poor living conditions.
There are ways to make life less harsh for farm animals. Reducing meat consumption can lessen the demand for factory farming and its associated harms. Moreover, slowing chicken growth rates or giving hens better living spaces can help reduce their suffering.
These figures are based on estimates from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
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Yesterday
South Korea is undergoing one of the world’s most rapid demographic transitions. Fertility rates — the number of children a woman has over her lifetime — have fallen rapidly over the last 50 years, and this is reflected in a rapidly aging population.
One of the clearest signs is the total number of children living in South Korea. In the chart, you can see that the number of children and adolescents under 15 years old is shrinking quickly.
The number of under-15s peaked around a decade later but has now fallen by 60%, from 14 million to less than 6 million.
This is a pattern we see in other countries such as Japan, China, and even Thailand — albeit at different rates.
Explore more data on population trends, births, and fertility rates in our Population and Demography data explorer →
March 06
The chart shows health expenditure per person for G7 countries; the data is adjusted for differences in living costs between countries.
The US spends much more on healthcare per person than any other G7 nation: $12,000 in 2021. This is more than 50% higher than Germany, the next-highest spender.
Japan and Italy spend just $4,700 and $4,400 per person at the lowest end — slightly over one-third of US spending.
Despite spending much more on healthcare, the United States has the lowest life expectancy in the G7. This is due to a combination of higher death rates from smoking, obesity, homicides, opioid overdoses, road accidents, and infant mortality.
Explore health expenditure per person for other countries →
March 05
People might associate democracy with having the right to vote. But meaningful democracy is much more than that.
In 2022, nearly every country granted its citizens the right to vote. 85% of them had an elected parliament and government. In 82%, elections were multi-party, meaning that people had more than one option on the ballot. You can see this in the chart.
But, fewer than two-thirds of these elections were genuinely competitive. In others, voters were systematically pressured or intimidated, the timing of elections was violated, or election fraud influenced the results.
Even more concerning, in only 39% of countries were people able to express their political opinions and associate freely.
As a result, just over one-third of countries recently held elections that met all of these democratic criteria and can be considered truly free and fair.
Find out which countries have all democratic criteria and which don't →
March 04
In 1978, Louise Brown became the first baby born through in vitro fertilization (IVF). In this technique, eggs are fertilized with sperm in a lab before the resulting embryos are transferred to the uterus.
Assisted reproductive technologies have advanced further and now become widely available.
These innovations have helped many people who might otherwise struggle to conceive — supporting individuals and couples facing infertility, allowing older parents to preserve fertility, and enabling same-sex couples to have children.
The chart shows the share of births in 2019 that involved assisted reproductive technologies across various European countries. This can include cross-border treatment.
Spain had the highest share, with nearly 9% of births resulting from assisted reproductive technology, followed by Greece, Denmark, and Czechia. In contrast, countries like Ireland, Lithuania, Serbia, and Turkey had much lower rates, with less than 2% of all births.
Explore more data on fertility rates and reproductive technology →
March 03
Since 2000, fewer couples in England and Wales have divorced within the first ten years of marriage, reversing the trend of the late 20th century.
The chart shows the percentage of marriages ending in divorce within a decade, based on the year of marriage. For those married in 1965, one in ten divorced within ten years.
By 1975, this had nearly doubled to 18% as legal reforms made separation easier and less stigmatized. Divorce rates peaked for couples married in 1995, with one in four divorcing by their tenth anniversary.
But, as you can see, this trend has started to reverse. Of the couples that married in 2012, only 17% had divorced by 2022. That’s well below the peak in the 1990s.
Explore our data on marriages and divorces in other countries →
February 28
The biggest migration story of the past few centuries has not been from country to country but from rural areas to cities.
In 1960, one-third of the world’s population lived in urban areas. This share is now closing in on 60%. By contrast, less than 4% of the global population are international migrants.
But some countries are urbanizing much more quickly than others. Bangladesh is one example of a country that has experienced much faster internal migration than its South Asian neighbors. You can see this on the chart.
In 1972, just 8% of people in Bangladesh lived in towns and cities. This share has more than quadrupled to 40%.
Explore more data on the global movement of populations from rural areas to cities →
February 27
The Ipsos Housing Monitor 2025 surveyed people across 30 countries, asking: “In general, do you think that your country is on the right track or the wrong track when it comes to housing?”.
The chart shows results for European countries, where housing prices dipped after the 2008 global financial crisis, before starting to rise again around 2013, with particularly large increases since 2015.
The Netherlands and Spain stand out, with nearly 80% believing their country is on the wrong track.
People in Poland and Sweden are less concerned than in other countries. But even in these nations, the majority feels like their country is on the wrong track.
Explore more data on optimism and pessimism about the future →
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