Global Poorest Countries Ranking: Analysis of the 50 Countries with the Lowest GDP per Capita in 2025

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According to the 2025 international economic statistics, significant global economic disparities still exist. This article lists the 50 countries with the lowest per capita GDP, with South Sudan at $251, ranking first and becoming one of the poorest countries in the world. The economic struggles of these nations reflect the deep reality of global wealth inequality.

The Poorest Ten Countries: Economic Challenges in Sub-Saharan Africa

The top ten poorest countries are mainly in Africa: South Sudan ($251), Yemen ($417), Burundi ($490), Central African Republic ($532), Malawi ($580), Madagascar ($595), Sudan ($625), Mozambique ($663), Democratic Republic of the Congo ($743), and Niger ($751). Most of these impoverished areas suffer from long-term wars, climate deterioration, underdeveloped infrastructure, and shortages of educational resources. South Sudan, one of Africa’s least populous countries, remains extremely poor due to ongoing conflicts since its independence in 2011.

Economic Divergence on the African Continent: From Chad to Ghana’s Development Ladder

Among the 50 poorest countries globally, African nations constitute the majority. Countries still in poverty include Somalia ($766), Nigeria ($807), Liberia ($908), Sierra Leone ($916), Mali ($936), Gambia ($988), Chad ($991), Rwanda ($1,043), Togo ($1,053), Ethiopia ($1,066), Lesotho ($1,098), Burkina Faso ($1,107), and Guinea-Basso ($1,126). Relative to these, somewhat better-off African countries like Ghana ($2,519) and Kenya ($2,468) still have per capita GDP well below the global average.

Asia and the Pacific: Diverse Challenges in Low-Income Countries

Low-income countries in Asia and the Pacific face various development obstacles. Myanmar ($1,177), Tanzania ($1,280), Zambia ($1,332), Uganda ($1,338), Tajikistan ($1,432), Nepal ($1,458), East Timor ($1,491), Cambodia ($2,870), and Bangladesh ($2,689) have large populations but slow economic growth. Pacific island nations like Kiribati ($2,414) and the Solomon Islands ($2,379) struggle due to geographic isolation and limited resources. Meanwhile, India ($2,878), despite being the second most populous country in the world, still has a per capita GDP in the low-income stage.

Why These Countries Are the Poorest in the World: Structural Challenges Analysis

The world’s poorest countries often face multiple challenges: political instability leading to investment droughts, severely inadequate infrastructure hindering business development, lack of human capital limiting productivity, and frequent natural disasters (such as droughts and floods) devastating agriculture. Additionally, these countries rely heavily on trade but have low bargaining power, often exporting raw materials and importing high-priced finished goods, which distorts their economic structures further.

Data also shows that African countries are densely impoverished, while low-income Asian countries, though fewer in number, have large populations. Rich in natural resources, these regions have development potential, but weak governance and corruption prevent resource wealth from translating into public welfare. Improving education, health, infrastructure, and institutional capacity is key for these nations to escape poverty and narrow the global economic gap.

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