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Announcement

The University of Oxford’s vice-chancellor, Professor Irene Tracey, gave us a nice shout-out in her recent annual oration

Professor Tracey said:

And did you realise that Our World in Data, the first port of call for millions seeking information on ourselves and our planet, is hosted by the Oxford Martin School?

Watch her address here

Learn more about the relationship between Our World in Data and the University of Oxford.

Data Insight

A line graph depicting life expectancy for French individuals of various ages, from 1816 to 2023. The y-axis represents life expectancy in years, ranging from 30 to 90 years. Each line corresponds to different ages: at birth, 10-year-olds, 25-year-olds, 45-year-olds, 65-year-olds, and 80-year-olds.

Each line shows fluctuations in life expectancy over time but there is a notable increase for all age groups. Significant historical events, such as the Franco-Prussian War, the Spanish Flu, and World War II, are marked on the timeline, indicating periods of impact on life expectancy. 

The data sources for the chart are the Human Mortality Database and the UN WPP. The chart is licensed CC BY to Our World in Data.

Life expectancy has increased at all ages

It’s a common misconception that life expectancy has increased only because fewer children die. Historical mortality records show that adults today also live much longer than adults in the past.

It’s true that child mortality rates were much higher in the past, and their decline has greatly improved overall life expectancy. But in recent decades, improvements in survival at older ages have been even more important.

The chart shows the period life expectancy in France for people of different ages. This measures how long someone at each of those ages would live, on average, if they experienced the death rates recorded in that year. For example, the last point on the top dark-red line shows that an 80-year-old in 2023 could expect to live to about 90, assuming mortality rates stayed as they were in 2023.

As you can see, life expectancy in France has risen at every age. In 1816, someone who had reached the age of 10 could expect to live to 57. By 2023, this had increased to 84. For those aged 65, it rose from 76 in 1816, to 87 in 2023.

The data for many other countries shows the same. This remarkable shift is the result of advances in medicine, public health, and living standards.

Explore the data and read more about how life expectancy is measured

Article

Featured image

Is vaping less harmful than smoking, and does it help people quit?

Answers to some of the most frequently asked questions about vaping and its effects.

Data Insight

This is a line graph depicting the global gender gap in primary school enrollment from 1900 to 2023. The vertical axis represents the percentage of primary school-age children enrolled in primary education, ranging from 0% to 100%. The horizontal axis shows the years from 1900 to 2023. 

There are two lines on the graph: one represents girls, shown in green, and the other represents boys, shown in purple. In 1900, about 31% of boys and 23% of girls were enrolled in primary education. The lines gradually rise, reflecting an increase in enrollment over time. By 2023, the enrollment rates are nearly equal, with 91% of boys and 89% of girls enrolled. 

Text annotations on the graph highlight the key statistics for 2023 and 1900. The data sources for the information presented are the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (2025) and the study by Lee and Lee (2016). The image is credited to Our World in Data and is licensed under CC BY.

A century of progress in access to primary education

The world has made major progress in expanding access to education. A century ago, most children did not have the option to go to school at all. Today, access to education is widely seen as a basic right that governments are expected to provide. And most governments succeed — according to statistics compiled by UNESCO, about 9 in 10 children of primary school age are enrolled.

The chart shows how this expansion unfolded for boys and girls separately. Throughout most of the 20th century, enrollment rose steadily, but boys remained more likely to be in school than girls. It was only towards the end of the century that this gap began to close. Today, the gap is small: around 91% of boys and 89% of girls are enrolled in primary school.

While the gap is small globally, it remains large and persistent in some countries. In Chad, in Central Africa, about 80% of boys are enrolled in primary school, compared with 67% of girls. This difference has shown little change in recent years, as the data linked below shows.

Explore enrollment gender gaps for all countries and across education levels.
Announcement

Hannah Ritchie has a new paper out in the scientific journal “One Earth” about land use, with a focus on croplands

The paper’s abstract reads:

Shifting demand for food, fuel, and fiber and environmental change and technological advances will all affect the extent and geographical location of cropland in the 21st century. Improved agricultural and land use policy is needed to meet these challenges while protecting the natural environment essential for long-term sustainability.

Read the paper

Data Insight

The global number of maternal deaths has more than halved. Line chart titled "Estimated annual number of women who die from maternal conditions," showing a steady decline in estimated annual maternal deaths worldwide from about 625,000 in 1985 to about 260,000 in 2023, with a small uptick around 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic before falling again. Data source: World Health Organization - Global Health Observatory (2025). Chart licensed CC BY to Our World in Data.

Maternal deaths have more than halved in the last forty years

A woman dying when she is giving birth to her child is one of the greatest tragedies imaginable.

Every year, 260,000 women die from pregnancy-related causes. This number rose to 322,000 during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Fortunately, the world has made continuous progress, and such tragic deaths have become much rarer, as the chart shows. The WHO has published data since 1985. Since then, the number of maternal deaths has more than halved.

Explore data on the number of maternal deaths, country by country.
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Our Data Insights are bite-sized, data-driven insights on the world and how it’s changing.

Previously these were only available as part of our dedicated feed, but now you can find them via our recently improved search, allowing you to filter and focus on what interests you most.

Try it out

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Data Insight

This data visualization presents a bar graph illustrating the number of deaths in Bangladesh from storm events over the years, prominently featuring significant cyclone incidents. The vertical axis represents the number of deaths, ranging from 0 to over 300,000, while the horizontal axis spans from 1960 to 2023.

Key data points highlighted include:

- More than 300,000 deaths noted during the 1970 Bhola cyclone, categorized as a Category 3 cyclone.
- In 1991, 138,000 deaths occurred from a Category 4 cyclone.
- In 1985, 15,000 deaths were reported from a Category 3 cyclone.
- The year 2007 saw only 4,000 deaths from a Category 4 cyclone.
- Since 2007, no year has recorded more than 200 deaths, even with several Category 4 and 5 cyclones.

A note emphasizes that estimates before 1971 are based on deaths that occurred within Bangladesh's current borders. The data sources for the graph are EM-DAT, CRED, and UCLouvain, from the year 2024. The image is attrib uted to the "Our World in Data" project.

Bangladesh has become much more resilient to cyclones, saving many lives

In 1970, Cyclone Bhola hit Bangladesh, killing more than 300,000 people. It was a strong cyclone, but not unprecedented. What made it so deadly was the lack of any early detection systems, alarms, or mass evacuation procedures. A huge storm surged into a densely populated area, and hundreds of thousands of people drowned in their homes.

Since then, Bangladesh has become much more resilient to these events. The chart shows the country's annual death toll from storms, stretching back to 1960.

Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, a few large events claimed many lives. But in recent decades, the death toll has been low. That’s despite Bangladesh experiencing some extremely powerful cyclones. Cyclone Amphan (2020) and Mocha (2023) were both Category 5 — the strongest rating.

Bangladesh offers one of the clearest examples of how humans are not helpless in the face of “natural” disasters: investments in weather forecasting, early warning systems, and proper evacuation procedures can protect communities and save lives.

This development is part of a longer-term and widespread success in reducing humanity’s vulnerability to storms, floods, earthquakes, and other hazards. Read more in my article.
Data update

We’ve updated 19 charts to the 2025 versions of the Human Mortality and Human Fertility Databases

The Human Mortality and Human Fertility Databases provide data on deaths, births, fertility, and life expectancy that is highly harmonized and comparable across more than 30 developed countries.

The databases are maintained by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, and the French Institute for Demographic Studies.

Explore the data

Data Insight

A bar graph illustrates the sales trends of internal combustion engine cars and electric cars in China from 2010 to 2024. The bars representing internal combustion engine cars are shown in shades of purple and dominate the graph, with a peak reaching around 25 million units in 2017. This peak is indicated with an arrow and labeled "Sales peaked in 2017." After 2017, the sales of internal combustion engine cars decrease slightly while electric car sales, represented by green bars, show a rapid increase in recent years, particularly noticeable in the later years of the chart. The y-axis indicates sales figures ranging from 0 to 25 million, while the x-axis is labeled with the years from 2010 to 2024. At the bottom, the data source is cited as the International Energy Agency, Global EV Outlook 2025, with a CC BY license.

China’s internal combustion car sales peaked in 2017 as electric vehicles took off

Electric cars have become incredibly popular in China. In 2020, one in eighteen new cars sold was electric. By 2024, this had increased to one in two.

This growth has pushed down sales of internal combustion engine (ICE) cars, which run mostly on petrol. As you can see in the chart, sales of ICE cars peaked in 2017 and have declined since.

The world reached peak ICE car sales just one year later.

The displacement of petrol cars with electric ones is vital in decarbonizing transport. The rise of electric vehicles in China means the IEA expects oil demand to peak earlier than previously projected.

Here, “electric cars” include fully battery-electric ones and plug-in hybrids. In China, 56% of them were fully battery-electric.

Track data on the evolution of electric cars across the world
Announcement

Max Roser co-leads a new program at the Oxford Martin School on Forecasting Technological Change, with data to be hosted on Our World in Data

The new program, co-led with Oxford colleagues Doyne Farmer and François Lafond, will use data to forecast which technologies will advance, how fast they’ll spread, and what risks they might pose.

Data update

We’ve updated 20 charts to the 2025 version of the Penn World Table

The Penn World Table is an extensive database maintained by researchers at the University of Groningen and the University of California, Davis.

It covers economic growth, income, working hours, productivity, and more for 185 countries from 1950–2023.

Explore the data

Data Insight

From 5% to 76% in 30 years: Kenya has made substantial progress in providing access to electricity

Those with access to electricity take many of its benefits for granted: food refrigeration reduces waste, the radio can keep us company during the day, and light at night makes it possible to study or get together after sunset.

According to data published by the World Bank, 30 years ago, only 5% of people in Kenya had access to basic electricity and its benefits.

Since then, the country has made substantial progress, as the chart shows: by 2023, 76% of Kenyans had access to a basic electricity supply.

Explore our world map and charts of the share of the population with access to electricity.

Article

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Resource use matters, but material footprints are a poor way to measure it

Adding up the weight of very different materials doesn’t tell us about their scarcity, environmental, or socioeconomic impacts.

Data Insight

The image presents a line graph illustrating the average height of men by decade of birth, ranging from the year 1710 to 1980. The vertical axis indicates height in centimeters, with increments at 5 cm, from 160 cm to 185 cm. The graph features three lines representing three countries: Denmark, Netherlands, and Germany, each with distinct colors. The data points show a significant upward trend in height over the decades, particularly noticeable after 1900. The data source for the information presented is Baten and Blum from the year 2014, and the graph is published under a Creative Commons Attribution license.

Over many generations, better nutrition and lower disease have led to people becoming taller

Poor nutrition and illness can limit human growth, so long-term improvements in living conditions are often reflected in increases in average height.

At the individual level, height depends on many other factors, but genetics plays a particularly important role. Not all short people are undernourished or sick, and not all tall people are necessarily healthy. However, when we look at population averages across generations, broad patterns in nutrition and disease burden can play a visible role.

This is why historians often use height as an indirect measure of living conditions. By examining historical changes in height, researchers can gain insights into living standards during periods when little or no other data is available.

This chart presents estimates from Jörg Baten and Matthias Blum, published in the European Review of Economic History (2014). The lines show the average height of men by decade of birth in Denmark, the Netherlands, and Germany, from 1710 to 1980.

For the earlier period, the estimates are based mainly on military conscription records (which measured young men eligible for service), so they are not fully representative of the entire population.

These historical data points are less representative than modern survey data, but the changes are large enough that the overall pattern is meaningful even if exact levels carry some uncertainty.

The chart shows how rapidly average height rose in these countries during the 20th century, a trend consistent with major improvements in health and nutrition.

Explore historical height data from the same source for other countries

Data Insight

A world map shows the distribution of reported cases of guinea worm disease in 2024. Two countries are highlighted in darker shades: Chad, which has nine reported cases, and South Sudan, which has six reported cases. The rest of the map, particularly surrounding regions, is light-colored and marked as having no reported cases. The caption notes that there were only 15 reported cases globally and mentions that guinea worm disease is still endemic in three other countries. The data is sourced from the World Health Organization, with a note explaining that the disease is caused by a parasitic worm spread through contaminated water.

Only two countries recorded human cases of guinea worm disease in 2024

Guinea worm is an incredibly painful and debilitating disease; one that’s hard to imagine unless you’ve seen someone suffer from it.

As we explain in a dedicated article, it’s caused by the guinea worm parasite, whose larvae can be found in stagnant water. Drinking contaminated water lets the larvae enter the stomach and intestines. These grow into adult worms, getting into their joints and causing arthritic conditions, before emerging painfully through the skin.

The good news is that the world is extremely close to eradicating this disease. In 1989, more than 890,000 human cases were recorded globally, compared to only 15 in 2024.

As you can see in the map, these cases were recorded in just two countries: Chad and South Sudan.

There are three other countries — Ethiopia, Angola, and Mali — where guinea worm is still endemic (meaning it’s still considered present there), but they reported no new cases in 2024.

Here, we focus on guinea worm cases in humans, but it’s important to note that other animals — such as domestic dogs — can also be infected. This adds further challenges to eradicating the disease completely.

Explore more data on neglected tropical diseases, which we recently updated

Data Insight

The graphic presents a slope chart illustrating the fertility rate, defined as the average number of children a woman would bear if she experienced age-specific fertility rates observed in that year.

The chart covers the years from 1950 to 2023 and features four countries: Colombia, France, the United Kingdom, and China.

- In 1950, the fertility rates for these countries were notably higher, with Colombia at 6.4 births, China at 5.8 births, France at 3 births, and the United Kingdom at 2.2 births.
- By 2023, these rates have significantly declined, with Colombia, France, and the United Kingdom each at 1.6 births, and China at 1 birth per woman.

Data comes from the United Nations World Population Prospects for the year 2024. The chart is categorized under Creative Commons by attribution (CC BY).

In Colombia, fertility rates have fallen sharply in recent decades

Large families used to be the norm in Colombia, but that has changed a lot over just a few generations. I come from Colombia, and my own family reflects this: my grandmother had eleven siblings, my mother had seven, and I have just one sister.

My family is one example of this broader shift within Colombia. In 1950, around the time my mother was born, the fertility rate was 6.4 births per woman. By 2023, it had fallen to 1.6.

That’s what the chart here shows. It plots the total fertility rate: the average number of children a woman would have over her lifetime, if she experienced the observed birth rates of women in her country in the corresponding year. It’s the most widely used measure to track birth patterns across countries and over time.

The chart shows that Colombia’s fertility rate is similar to that of richer countries like France and the UK. It also displays Colombia’s trend alongside China’s for comparison. Perhaps surprisingly, the slope (i.e., the speed) of Colombia’s drop has been similar to China's, despite the latter introducing a one-child policy.

Colombia’s experience mirrors a wider change across many middle-income countries, including much of Latin America. Education of women, urbanization, declining infant mortality, family planning, and changing norms are all key drivers of this trend.

Read more about how fertility rates are calculated and what to keep in mind when interpreting trends

Data Insight

A bar chart displays the percentage of respondents from various countries who believe their lives will improve in the next five years, measured on the "Cantril Ladder." The highest percentage comes from Brazil at 92%, followed by Nigeria and Indonesia at 88%. The United States reports 87%, while Argentina, Mexico, and the Philippines each have 85%. Australia is at 84%, Sweden at 83%, and South Africa at 82%. Spain and the UK both show 82% and 80%, respectively. Japan registers 79%, India at 77%, Germany at 75%, and Egypt at the lowest with 73%. The chart has color-coded bars, with a darker shade indicating the percentage of those who believe life will improve and lighter shades indicating those who think it will stay the same or get worse. The data source is the Global Flourishing Study (2024), with information collected in 2023. The chart is licensed under CC BY.

Most people are fairly optimistic that their lives will improve

If you ask people about whether the world as a whole is getting better or worse, most people say the latter. People are generally pessimistic about global or societal progress.

But they are typically much more optimistic about improvements in their own lives.

In the chart, you can see what share of people think they would be higher or lower on the “Cantril Ladder” five years in the future. The “Cantril Ladder” asks people to rate their lives on a scale from 0 (the worst possible life) to 10 (the best). Here, respondents were asked to rate where they are now, and where they think they’d be in five years.

As you can see, most people say they will be higher on the ladder across a wide range of countries. They expect their lives to improve.

Of course, this is not true of everyone, everywhere, but these results tend to support the argument that people are generally “individually optimistic, but societally pessimistic”.

Explore more data on happiness and life satisfaction across the world

Data Insight

A line graph showing the period life expectancy from 1974 to 2024 across 6 continents. Period life expectancy is the number of years the average person born in a certain year would live if they experienced the same chances of dying at each age as people did that year.

- North America starts at 72 years (1974) and rises to 80 years (2024).
- Europe begins at 71 years and increases to 79 years.
- Oceania starts at 68 years and also increases, reaching 79 years.
- Latin America begins at 61 years and goes up to 76 years.
- Asia starts at 56 years and climbs to 75 years.
- Africa shows the lowest life expectancy, starting at 46 years, but increases to 64 years by 2024.

The data source is cited as "UN, World Population Prospects (2024)". The chart is CC BY to Our World in Data.

Life expectancy in Africa is lower than on other continents

Where you are born and stay for much of your life is a strong predictor of how long you’re likely to live. The chart shows the differences in period life expectancy across continents.

Average life expectancy has converged to a fairly narrow band between 75 and 80 years in North America, Oceania, Europe, Latin America, and Asia. Africa stands out: its average life expectancy is 64 years, over a decade lower than any other region.

This gap reflects several overlapping factors: high rates of child and maternal deaths, a heavy burden of infectious diseases such as malaria, HIV/AIDS, and tuberculosis, limited access to quality healthcare and infrastructure, and high levels of poverty.

Despite this, life expectancy in Africa has risen by almost two decades since 1974.

Explore life expectancy for individual countries

Data Insight

The image depicts a line chart illustrating child mortality rates, specifically the estimated percentage of newborns who do not survive past the age of five. The chart has two distinct lines: one representing Sweden in blue and the other representing South Korea in red. 

Starting in the early 1800s, the blue line for Sweden shows a gradual decline in the child mortality rate, fluctuating around 35% at the beginning and continuing to decrease steadily over the years, reaching nearly 0% by 2023. 

In contrast, the red line for South Korea begins more steeply in the mid-20th century, experiencing a rapid decline after 1950, ultimately approaching a very low percentage by 2023. 

The title at the top reads "Child mortality rate," and below it, descriptive text clarifies that the data reflects the estimated share of newborns who die before reaching five years old. The sources for the data are listed at the bottom as Gapminder (2015) and the UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (2025). The entire chart is labeled as CC BY for Creative Commons licensing.

Declining child mortality, fast and slow

As this chart shows, two centuries ago, about one in three children in Sweden died before they were five years old.

Since then, the child mortality rate in Sweden has declined to 0.3%.

South Korea achieved a similar reduction much faster. This is often the case: the first countries to improve living conditions usually needed much longer than some of those countries catching up later — the latter can learn from what worked elsewhere.

Explore this data for every other country in the world

Article

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Does the news reflect what we die from?

What do Americans die from, and what do the New York Times, Washington Post, and Fox News report on?