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Photo: Kurdish girl. Iraq, 1997. Copyright Sebastiao Salgado/Amazonas
Photo: Kurdish girl. Iraq, 1997. Copyright Sebastiao Salgado/Amazonas

This page is background information, last updated in May 2002 and still available for reference. For the latest on the Special Session on Children, please go to the Special Session index.

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Press Kit

Who Is The Global Child?

There are 2.1 billion children in the world, accounting for 36% of the world's population. Some 132 million children are born each year.

Globally, 1 in 4 children lives in abject poverty - in families with income lower than $1 a day. In developing countries, 1 in 3 children live in abject poverty.

One of every 12 children dies before they reach five, mostly from preventable causes.


Of every 100 children born in 2000
  • 53 were born in Asia (19 in India, 15 in China)
  • 19 were born in sub-Saharan Africa
  • 9 were born in Latin America and the Caribbean
  • 7 were born in the Middle East and North Africa
  • 5 were born in the Eastern Europe, CIS and Baltic States
  • 7 were born in the industrialized nations of Western Europe, USA, Canada, Israel, Japan, Australia and New Zealand.
If social conditions remain unchanged, the following will most likely be their fate:

Birth registration

The births of 40 out of every 100 will not be registered. These children will have no official existence or recognition of nationality.

Immunization

26 of every 100 will not be immunized against any disease.

Nutrition

30 will suffer from malnutrition in their first five years of life.
Only 46 will be exclusively breastfed for the first three months of life.

Water and Sanitation

19 will have no access to clean drinking water.
40 will live without adequate sanitation.

Schooling

17 of the children will never go to school. Of these, 9 will be girls. Of every 100 children who enter 1st grade, 25 will not reach the 5th grade.

Child labour

1 of every 5 children between the ages of 5 and 14 in the developing world will work.

Half of those who work will do so full time.
9 of the 24 children born in Africa will work.
11 of the 53 children born in Asia will work.
1 of the 8 born in Latin America will work.

Life expectancy

These children will live to an average of 63 years.
In the industrialized world, they will live 78 years.

In the 45 countries most affected by HIV/AIDS, their average life expectancy is 58 years. In Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe - countries heavily affected by HIV/AIDS - life expectancy is less than 43 years.

Sources: ILO Child Labour Statistics; UNICEF, The State of the World's Children, 2002; UN Population Division.

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