Key findings from the United Kingdom:
- Record numbers of children are living in poverty across the UK.
- The UK saw a 34% increase in relative child income poverty between 2013 and 2023.
- The UK has the highest increase in relative child income poverty of the 37 high-income countries reviewed.
Dr Philip Goodwin, Chief Executive Officer of the UK Committee for UNICEF (UNICEF UK) said: “Right now, a record number of children in the UK and across the world are growing up in poverty and the impact can last a lifetime.
“The Autumn Budget is a pivotal moment, a chance for the UK Government to rewrite the story for thousands of children and prove that their lives truly matter. Scrapping the cruel two-child limit policy for families in the UK is not just morally right, it is economically smart. It is the single most effective way to lift hundreds of thousands of children out of hardship.
“Similarly, across the world millions of children are growing up without their basic needs met. The UK Government must commit to at least 25% of foreign aid to be spent on programmes for them – including health, education, immunisation and nutrition.
“The time to act is now”.
*UK spokespeople available on request*
London, 20 November 2025 – More than 1 in 5 children in low- and middle-income countries – or 417 million – are severely deprived in at least two vital areas critical for their health, development, and wellbeing, according to UNICEF’s flagship report issued on World Children’s Day today.
The State of the World’s Children 2025: Ending Child Poverty – Our Shared Imperative draws on data from over 130 low- and middle-income countries to assess the breadth of multidimensional poverty by measuring deprivations across six categories: Education, health, housing, nutrition, sanitation, and water. The analysis shows that 118 million children experience three or more deprivations, and 17 million face four or more deprivations.
“Children growing up in poverty and deprived of essentials like good nutrition, proper sanitation and shelter, face devastating consequences for their health and development,” said UNICEF Executive Director, Catherine Russell. “It doesn’t have to be this way. When governments commit to ending child poverty by implementing effective policies, they can unlock a world of possibilities for children.”
The highest rates of multidimensional poverty among children are concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. In Chad, for example, 64 per cent of children face two or more severe deprivations, and just under 25 per cent face three or more.
Sanitation is the most widespread severe deprivation, with 65 per cent of children lacking access to a toilet in low-income countries, 26 per cent in lower-middle income countries, and 11 per cent in upper-middle income countries. A lack of adequate sanitation can increase children’s exposure to diseases.
The share of children facing one or more severe deprivations in low-and-middle-income countries dropped from 51 per cent in 2013 to 41 per cent in 2023, largely due to prioritising child rights in national policies and economic planning. However, progress is stalling. Conflict, climate and environmental crises, demographic shifts, mounting national debt and widening technological divides are compounding poverty. At the same time, unprecedented cuts to Official Development Assistance (ODA) risk deepening child deprivation across low- and middle-income countries.
Yet progress towards ending child poverty is possible. For example, Tanzania achieved a 46-percentage point reduction in multidimensional child poverty between 2000 and 2023, partially driven by government cash support grants, and empowering poor households to make their own financial decisions. While in Bangladesh, child poverty dropped by 32-percentage points over the same period, thanks to government-led initiatives that increased education and electricity access, improved housing quality, and investment in water and sanitation services that reduced open defecation from 17 per cent in 2000 to zero in 2022.
Poverty undermines children’s health, development, and learning – leading to weaker job prospects, shorter lifespans, and increased rates of depression and anxiety. The report highlights that the youngest children, those with disabilities, and those living in crises are particularly vulnerable.
The report also examines monetary poverty, which further limits children’s access to food, education, and health services. According to the latest data, more than 19 per cent of children globally live in extreme monetary poverty, surviving on less than US$3 per day. Nearly 90 per cent of these children are in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.
The report includes an analysis on 37 high-income countries, showing that about 50 million children – or 23 per cent of the child population in these countries – live in relative monetary poverty, meaning their household has significantly less income than most others in their country, limiting their ability to participate fully in everyday life.
While poverty declined, on average, by 2.5 per cent across the 37 countries between 2013 and 2023 – progress has stagnated or reversed in many cases. In France, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, for example, child poverty increased by over 20 per cent. During the same period, Slovenia reduced its poverty rate by more than a quarter, largely thanks to a strong family benefits system and minimum wage legislation.
The State of the World’s Children 2025 highlights that ending child poverty is achievable, and underscores the importance of centering child rights, as outlined in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, in all government strategies, policies and actions aimed at poverty reduction, by:
- Making ending child poverty a national priority.
- Integrating children’s needs into economic policies and budgets.
- Providing social protection programmes, including cash support to families.
- Expanding access to essential public services, such as education, healthcare, water, sanitation, nutrition, and housing.
- Promoting decent work for parents and caregivers to strengthen their economic security, which is closely linked to children’s progress.
The report comes at a time when many governments around the world are scaling back foreign assistance. Cuts in development aid could result in the deaths of 4.5 million children under the age of 5 by 2030, according to The Lancet. At the same time, recent UNICEF estimates show the cuts could leave six million more children out of school by next year.
The UK Government has made a 40% cut to the aid budget, compounding these threats and disrupting childhood for millions. UNICEF UK is calling for the UK Government to take decisive action by ringfencing at least 25% of foreign aid on programmes for children- including health, education, immunisation and nutrition.
“Too many children were already deprived of their basic needs, even before the global funding crisis threatened to make things far worse,” said Russell. “This is not the time to retreat. It’s a time to build on the hard-earned progress for children that has been made over the years. Governments and businesses can do that by strengthening investment in key services for children to keep them healthy and protected and ensuring that they have access to essentials like good nutrition, especially in fragile and humanitarian contexts. Investing in children delivers on a healthier and more peaceful world – for everyone.”
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Notes for editors:
Multimedia materials available here.
This year, World Children’s Day – UNICEF’s annual day marking the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child on 20 November – is commemorated under the theme, My Day, My Rights, which aims to centre children’s voices and lived experiences.
Joint UNICEF estimates with Save the Children, along with analysis of survey data on multidimensional poverty, were used to calculate child material deprivation, looking at six rights that are constitutive of poverty: education, health, housing, nutrition, sanitation and water. The survey data cover 89 countries and were used for presenting individual country values. The estimates cover 133 countries and were used to calculate regional averages and other aggregate values. For countries with available survey data, the estimates took existing trends and extended them beyond available survey years. For countries that had partial data, they used available indicators like stunting or immunization coverage rates to calculate child poverty trends over time.
The World Bank’s updated monetary poverty thresholds now stand at $3.00/day for low-income countries, $4.20/day for lower-middle-income countries, and $8.30/day for upper-middle-income countries, reflecting the rising cost of basic needs. Using these thresholds, the World Bank estimates poverty rates and head counts based on data from a variety of surveys collated in its Global Monitoring Database. Poverty rate projections are used whenever survey data are not available.
Child poverty in high income countries is typically measured in relative terms – a child is living in poverty if they live in household earning less than 60 per cent of the national median income. Data comes from Eurostat for EU countries and from national statistical offices in other high-income countries.
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