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2025 Ranking: The Poorest Countries in the World by GDP Per Capita
The 2025 Global Economic Portrait reveals startling disparities. According to the latest data, fifty countries have the lowest per capita incomes on the planet, illustrating a map of poverty where some of the world’s poorest nations face multiple challenges. South Sudan leads with just $251 annually per person, highlighting the realities of uneven development.
The Triple Threat of Extreme Poverty
At the top of this unfortunate ranking, three nations stand out for their collapsed incomes. South Sudan ranks last with a GDP per capita of $251, followed closely by Yemen at $417, then Burundi at $490. These three countries embody the most extreme poverty measured in 2025, each facing humanitarian, political, or climate crises that cripple their economies.
The top ten positions remain dominated by African nations: Central African Republic ($532), Malawi ($580), Madagascar ($595), Sudan ($625), Mozambique ($663), DRC ($743), and Niger ($751). This concentration reveals fragile economic structures heavily dependent on agriculture and natural resource exploitation.
Africa Dominates the List of Most Fragile Economies
Of the fifty countries at the bottom of the ranking, the vast majority are from Africa. Somalia ($766), Nigeria ($807), Liberia ($908), Sierra Leone ($916), and Mali ($936) complete this picture of a continent where industrialization and economic diversification challenges remain massive.
Even African nations ranked beyond the top twenty-five have modest incomes: Gambia ($988), Chad ($991), Togo ($1,053), Lesotho ($1,098), Burkina Faso ($1,107), Guinea-Bissau ($1,126), Tanzania ($1,280), Zambia ($1,332), Uganda ($1,338), Benin ($1,532), Comoros ($1,702), Senegal ($1,811), Cameroon ($1,865), Guinea ($1,904), Zimbabwe ($2,199), Republic of the Congo ($2,356), Kenya ($2,468), Mauritania ($2,478), Ghana ($2,519), and Ivory Coast ($2,872).
Some Asian Nations Among the Least Developed
Beyond Africa, certain Asian regions also concentrate in low-income economies. Ethiopia ($1,066), Myanmar ($1,177), Tajikistan ($1,432), Nepal ($1,458), Timor-Leste ($1,491), Laos ($2,096), Kyrgyz Republic ($2,747), and Cambodia ($2,870) illustrate the continent’s economic challenges. India, despite its size and potential, records an average per capita income of $2,878 in 2025.
A few microstates and island nations also appear in this list: Solomon Islands ($2,379), Kiribati ($2,414), Papua New Guinea ($2,565), Haiti ($2,672), Bangladesh ($2,689), reflecting how geographic isolation and size constraints limit economic development.
Economic Disparities Reflect Complex Challenges
This ranking of the world’s poorest countries reveals much more than a simple income hierarchy. It highlights structural realities: political instability, armed conflicts, climate change, lack of access to education and infrastructure. Countries at the bottom face systemic obstacles that hinder their transition to diversified, resilient economies.
The stark gap between South Sudan ($251) and developed nations raises questions about the mechanisms of global economic convergence and the international community’s capacity to support these nations toward progress.