Data InsightsNearly half of young children in Guatemala suffer from stunting

Nearly half of young children in Guatemala suffer from stunting

Horizontal bar chart of the share of children younger than five years who are stunted across Central American and Caribbean countries, where Guatemala is highest at 46% and the other countries range from 6.7% to 22%. Source: World Health Organization - Global Health Observatory (2026). License: CC BY.

Chronic malnutrition in early childhood can slow development and growth, leaving children shorter than expected for their age. That’s the focus of the chart: the share of children under five who are stunted, meaning they are much shorter than expected for healthy growth.

The consequences of stunting persist beyond childhood, affecting both physical health and cognitive development.

Guatemala has one of the highest stunting rates in the world: almost half of children younger than five are stunted according to survey estimates published by the World Health Organization.

Guatemala’s rate is the highest in its region, by far. In the chart, you can see it compared to a selection of other nearby countries – its rate is twice that of Haiti, the next-highest country and a much poorer one.

My colleagues Hannah Ritchie and Tuna Acisu recently wrote about what countries with high stunting today can learn from Japan. Over the 20th century, Japan reduced childhood stunting from over 70% to under 5%, and the decline from around Guatemala's current level to under 5% took place within a generation.

Read their article, “Childhood stunting fell dramatically over the 20th century”

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