Global Hunger Index
The Global Hunger Index is a tool used to measure and track hunger at the global, regional, and national levels. The report, published annually in October, describes the prevalence of hunger and undernutrition in individual countries and gauges both progress and setbacks in the global fight against hunger. GHI scores can be used to rank countries, and current results can be compared with past outcomes. An interactive map] enables users to visualize data across different years and zoom into specific regions or countries.
The index was originally developed by the International Food Policy Research Institute in cooperation with Welthungerhilfe, a German aid organization, and was first published in 2006. In 2007, the Irish non-governmental organization Concern Worldwide joined as a co-publisher. In 2018, IFPRI handed the project over to its longstanding partners Welthungerhilfe and Concern Worldwide, who have continued the GHI as a joint initiative ever since. In 2024, the Institute for International Law of Peace and Armed Conflict joined the project as an academic partner.
The Global Hunger Index 2025 marks the anniversary by taking stock of two decades of evidence-based recommendations: moving from productivity-focused agriculture toward rights-based, inclusive, and resilience-oriented approaches. Priorities include, among others, stronger governance and accountability; climate-adapted and transformed food systems; equal opportunities; support for rural livelihoods; cross-sectoral strategies; and coordinated, responsible development finance. It underscores the importance of reliable data, anticipatory risk management, and local empowerment, especially of women and marginalized groups.
In previous years, topics included:2010: Early childhood undernutrition among children younger than the age of two.2011: Rising and more volatile food prices of the recent years and the effects these changes have on hunger and malnutrition.2012: Achieving food security and sustainable use of natural resources, when the natural sources of food become increasingly scarce.2013: Strengthening community resilience against undernutrition and malnutrition.2014: Hidden hunger, a form of undernutrition characterized by micronutrient deficiencies.2015: Armed conflict and its relation to hunger.2016: Reaching the UN Sustainable Development Goal of zero hunger by 2030.2017: The challenges of inequality and hunger.
- 2018: Forced migration and hunger.
- 2019: Climate change and hunger.
- 2020: One decade to Zero Hunger: Linking health and sustainable food systems".
- 2021: Hunger and Food Systems in Conflict Settings.
- 2022: Food Systems Transformation and Local Governance.
- 2023: The Power of Youth in Shaping Food Systems.
- 2024: How Gender Justice can advance Climate Resilience and Zero Hunger
- 2025: 20 Years of tracking Progress: Time to recommit to Zero Hunger
An allows users to visualize the data for different years and zoom into specific regions or countries.
Calculation of GHI scores
| Level | Value |
| Low | ≤ 9.9 |
| Moderate | 10.0-19.9 |
| Serious | 20.0-34.9 |
| Alarming | 35.0-49.9 |
| Extremely alarming | ≥ 50.0 |
The GHI combines 4 component indicators:
- Undernourishment: the share of the population with insufficient caloric intake.
- Child stunting: the share of children under age five who have low height for their age, reflecting chronic undernutrition.
- Child wasting: the share of children under age five who have low weight for their height, reflecting acute undernutrition.
- Child mortality: the share of children who die before their fifth birthday, partly reflecting the fatal mix of inadequate nutrition and unhealthy environments.
For 13 countries, individual scores could not be calculated and ranks could not be determined owing to a lack of data. Seven countries were provisionally designated by severity based on other published data. For the remaining 6 countries, data were insufficient to allow for either calculating GHI scores or assigning provisional categories.
Regional and National Trends in Hunger
The 2025 GHI report finds that hunger is most severe in the regions of Africa South of the Sahara and South Asia, where hunger remains serious. Africa South of the Sahara’s high GHI score is driven by the highest undernourishment and child mortality rates of any region by far. In South Asia, serious hunger is driven by rising undernourishment and persistently high child undernutrition.Hunger is designated as moderate in West Asia and North Africa, though food crises are occurring in Gaza and Yemen. Hunger is categorized as low in Latin America and the Caribbean, East and Southeast Asia, and Europe and Central Asia.
According to the 2025 GHI scores and provisional designations, hunger is considered alarming in 6 countries and serious in 36 countries. Many countries are slipping backward: in 27 countries with low, moderate, serious, or alarming 2025 GHI scores, hunger has actually increased since 2016. In 10 countries with moderate, serious, or alarming 2025 GHI scores, progress has largely stalled and their 2025 GHI scores have declined by less than 5 percent from their 2016 GHI scores.
A small number of countries—including Mozambique, Rwanda, Somalia, Togo and Uganda—have made significant improvements in their GHI scores, even if hunger in these countries remains too high.
Country rankings
Country rankings as per the Global Hunger Index.'''Legend'''
Literature
- – Gender Justice, Climate Resilience and Food and Nutrition Security
- – The Power of Youth in Shaping Food Systems
- – Food Systems Transformation and Local Governance
- – Hunger and Food Systems in Conflict Settings
- – One Decade to Zero Hunger - Linking Health and Sustainable Food Systems
- – The Challenge of Hunger and Climate Change
- – Forced Migration and Hunger
- – The Inequalities of Hunger
- – Getting to Zero Hunger
- – Armed Conflict and the Challenge of Hunger
- – The Challenge of Hidden Hunger
- – The Challenge of Hunger: Building Resilience to achieve Food and Nutrition Security
- – The Challenge of Hunger: Ensuring Sustainable Food Security Under Land, Water, and Energy Stresses
- – The Challenge of Hunger: Taming Price Spikes and Excessive Food Price Volatility
- – The Challenge of Hunger: Focus on the Crisis of Child Undernutrition
- – The Challenge of Hunger: Focus on Financial Crisis and Gender Inequality
- – The Challenge of Hunger 2008
- – The Challenge of Hunger 2007
- – ''The Challenge of Hunger 2006''