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Data InsightsIn these nine countries with the worst child mortality rates, about one in ten children dies before turning five

In these nine countries with the worst child mortality rates, about one in ten children dies before turning five

Around 1 in 10 children die before their fifth birthday in these countries, 2023

Horizontal bar chart of estimated deaths of children under five per 100 live births, showing selected country rates for 2023: Niger 11.5%, Nigeria 10.5%, Somalia 10.4%, Chad 10.1%, South Sudan 9.9%, Guinea 9.5%, Sierra Leone 9.4%, Central African Republic 9.2%, Mali 9.1%. For comparison the world average is 3.7% and the European Union (27) is 0.4%; an annotation notes child mortality in the EU is over twenty times lower than in these countries. Data source shown: UN IGME (2025) — CC BY.

Despite the world’s immense progress against child mortality, in some of the poorest countries, one in ten children still dies. That’s a level last 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.

To learn more, read my colleague Max’s article: “Child mortality: an everyday tragedy of enormous scale that we can make progress against”.

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