30 Most Miserable Countries in the World

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In this article, we shall discuss the 30 most miserable countries in the world. To skip our detailed analysis of the current macroeconomic outlook in 2024, the intricate link between poverty alleviation and sustainability, and corporate efforts underway to alleviate poverty rates and address climate challenges, go directly and see 10 Most Miserable Countries in the World

According to the IMF's World Economic Outlook 2024, the baseline forecast for the global economy is to continue its current growth trajectory at 3.2% during 2024 and 2025 at virtually the same pace as 2023. The report does demarcate a slightly advanced acceleration for larger economies, where growth is expected to rise from 1.6% in 2023 to 1.7% in 2024 and 1.8% in 2025. However, this is offset by a slight slowdown in many of the world's emerging markets and the most miserable countries in the world from 4.3% in 2023 to 4.2% in 2024 and 2025. Despite central banks hiking rates to restore price stability and geopolitical turbulence disturbing supply lines, the global economy has shown surprising resilience. One of the major reasons for this has been the low interest rates mortgage and housing markets which have offset the near-term impact of policy rate hikes.

To put the slowdown of the global economy in perspective, the World Bank, in its recent March 2024 update has noted that the first of its Sustainable Development Goals to end extreme poverty in the most miserable countries in the world by 2030 will likely not be met. The Bank estimates that nearly 574 million people, nearly 7 percent of the global population, will likely be living under the revised poverty line of $2.15 a day by the end of the decade. Today, much of extreme poverty is exclusively focused in sub-Saharan Africa, a region home to more than 400 million people living under the poverty line. The region in inflicted with weak governance, political and economic instability, and conflict.

A report by the UNDP disagrees with the conventional use of the poverty line in determining global poverty. In order to achieve a more holistic overview of what constitutes poverty, the UNDP report measures global poverty using the Multidimensional Poverty Index, which measures interconnected deprivations across multiple indicators like health, education, and standard living. The MPI uncovers poverty as a much more serious global issue by claiming that more than 20% of the global population lives in acute multidimensional poverty across 110 of the most miserable countries in the world whilst experiencing weighted deprivations ranging from 50% to 100%. 65% of people living below the poverty line according to the MPI (Multidimensional Poverty Index) are concentrated in five of the 30 Unhappiest Countries in the World, namely China, Indonesia, Myanmar, Sudan, and Yemen. Across the most miserable countries in the world, the incidence of poverty ranges from less than 1% in 21 countries to over 50% in 22 countries, 19 of which are located in sub-Saharan Africa. The report also highlights that rural poverty dominates considerably in every world region, as 84% of poor people are concentrated in rural locations.