Gapminder uses cookies to improve its statistics and user experience. By continuing to use the site you agree to
our cookie policy
.
X
Close
Donate
Resources
About
Log in
Donate
Resources
About
Log in
About
About Gapminder
Contact
History
Constitution
Gapminder Method
Team
Supporters
Awards
Frequently asked questions (FAQ)
Featured By
Media
Universities
Organisations
Business
Press Room
For Journalists
Request a Speaker
Interviews
Bios and photos
Answers
How Can the World Population Forecasts Be so Good?
How Did Babies per Woman Change in Different Regions?
How Did Babies per Woman Change in the World?
How Did The World Population Change?
How Does Income Relate to Life Expectancy?
How many are rich and how many are poor?
How Reliable is the World Population Forecast?
The rapid growth of the world population, when will it slow down?
What makes the world population continue to grow?
Where do people live?
Will saving poor children lead to overpopulation?
answers slideshows
Slideshow – How Did Babies per Woman Change in Different Regions?
Slideshow – How Did Babies per Woman Change in the World?
Slideshow – How Did the World Population Change?
Slideshow – How Does Income Relate to Life Expectancy?
Slideshow – How Reliable is the World Population Forecast?
Slideshow – Will Saving Poor Children lead to Overpopulation?
Become Gapminder Certified
Case Studies
test
Bikes
Contribute
Cookie Policy
Corona
COVID-19-Surveys
Discussions
Discussions
Dollar Street
Donations
Donation FAQ
Expander test
Factfulness
Factfulness 10 Rules of Thumb
The Gap Instinct
The Negativity Instinct
The Straight Line Instinct
The Fear Instinct
The Size Instinct
The Generalization Instinct
The Destiny Instinct
The Single Perspective Instinct
The Blame Instinct
The Urgency Instinct
Factfulness (the book)
32 improvements
Africa can catch up
Detailed Notes
Difference within Africa
Fertility in Iran
Guidelines on reasonable doubt for different kinds of data
Mistakes found
Straight lines, S-bends, slides, and humps
Systems thinking
The sense of superiority
What part of the line are you seeing?
Wrong proportions
Factpod
Ebola Contact Tracers Need Two Very Different Skills
Ebola easier to stop now than later
Ebola Will Stop the Same Way That It Started, Slowly
Global temperature is now higher than ever measured
I Love/Hate This Global Vaccination Graph
Liberia’s Ebola Curve Stopped Falling at 10 Cases/Day
More Precise UN Estimates of the Future World Population
Perfecting Ebola Contact Tracing
Poor Housing Transmit Ebola
Stop Ebola in Big City… Never Done Before
The Future of Ebola if Not Stopped Now
The Relation Between Ebola & Extreme Poverty Goes Both Ways
Why did Ebola Spread in West Africa?
Worldwide Child Mortality Down to 1 in 20
Zero is the Only Stable Level of Ebola
Facts
Almost everyone can read today
Almost half of all countries have had a woman leader
Child labor decreased until 2016
Clean drinking water increased
Death penalties decreased
Delivery care has increased
Education increased
Electricity access increased
Evaluated species increased
Extreme poverty rate dropped faster than ever during the past decades
Female top CEOs in the US increased
Few are missing electricity
Food production increased
Girls schooling increased
Global suicide rate decreased
HIV decreased
Hunger decreased
Improvements
Internet users increased
Leaded gasoline is now banned everywhere
Lethal indoor smoke decreased
Life expectancy increased
Mobile phones increased
Most people have enough food
Number of oil spills decreased
Once upon a time there was just one film
Ozone depleting gases decreased
Pirate attacks decreased
Protection of nature increased
Science publishing increased
Slavery was banned everywhere
Smallpox disappeared
Solar cost dropped to 400 time less
The extremely poor have become a minority
The global child mortality rate has dropped
The number of teams at the Olympics increased
Tuberculosis cases decreased
Vaccinations of babies increased
Women’s rights to vote increased
Fossil fuel reserves aren’t running out
Most global warming hides in the ocean
Fakta
De extremt fattiga har blivit en minoritet
De flesta har tillräckligt med mat
Få saknar elektricitet
Frameworks
World Health Chart
Print World Health Chart 2021
World Health Chart 2019
World Health Chart 2017
Four Regions
Income Levels
Income Level 1
Income Level 2
Income Level 3
Income Level 4
Income Mountains
Population age groups
Free material
Gapminder Desktop
Gapminder for…
Gapminder’s Unknown Story Service for Journalists
Gapminder Movement Form
Gapminder Tools Offline
Gapminder World Offline
Gapminder World Offline (Beta)
GDP per capita — v25
Get involved
Contribute to Dollar Street
Teaching materials
Translations
Follow us
Global working age share will decline a little
gw-categories-json
gw-example-json
gw-examples
gw-graph-examples
gw-graph-examples-desktop
gw-graph-examples-desktop-cj
gw-graph-json
gw-graph-test
gw-popular-graphs
gw-tags-json
HIV resources
Home
home_test
Ignorance
Gapminder Index Pilot
Studies
Refugee Misconception Study 2023
Sustainable Development Misconception Study 2020
European Health Misconception Study 2019
Global Misconception Study 2019
Gapminder Misconception Study 2017
Income Mountains Dataset — Documentation Version 2
Misconception Studies
Sustainable Development Misconception Study 2020 (Swedish version)
Paid Services
Custom Bubbles
Payment Confirmation
Payment Failed
Privacy & Terms of Use
Terms of Use
Project Rosling
Resources
Worldview Upgrader
Slideshows
Sources
Data crunching principles
Subscribe to newsletter
Supplementary Material: Why believing that Chinese labs accidentally released the new coronavirus is bad for public health
Teaching with Gapminder
Materials
Around the world
Archive
Terms of Use
Test
test questions
How many children will there be in 2100?
What percent of adults in the world today are literate – can read and write?
What’s the worldwide average life expectancy?
Where do people live?
test sections
Test Support Page
test-widgets
Tests
Thanks for your support!
The UN Goals disqualify traditional ideas of progress
The Worldview Upgrader
Q1 – Extreme poverty in high-income countries
Q10 – Sexual harassment laws
Q11 – Megacities
Q12 – Most used raw material
Q13 – Excess heat in oceans
Q14 – Plastic in oceans
Q15 – Endangered or threatened species
Q16 – Refugees share of world population
Q17 – Rich governments’ incomes from customs
Q18 – Population map today
Q2 – Hunger
Q3 – Suicide trend globally
Q4 – Girls’ schooling in low-income countries
Q5 – Female top managers
Q6 – Safe water at home
Q7 – Fossil fuels
Q8 – Population in low-income countries
Q9 – Incomes from agriculture, forestry and fishing
Topics
“Low income countries”
A paradox: Less people if more survive
Alcohol deaths
Asian values
Babies per woman
Chemicals
Chemophobia
Child deaths from diarrhea
CO2 emissions
CO2 emissions by income
CO2 per capita
Comparing disasters
Contraception
Deaths in wars
Democracy
Doubling scale
Ebola
Economy
Educated mothers and child survival
Education
ENDANGERED SPECIES
Energy sources
Extreme poverty
Extreme poverty trend
Falling birth rates and powerful leaders
FAMILY-SIZE
Fear of nuclear
FOOD
Forced Labor
Future consumers
Future trends
Girls education on Level 1
Guitars per capita
Historic babies per woman and child mortality
Historic population data
IMF forecasts
Income distribution in Mexico and US
Institutions
LEISURE
Life expectancy
Literacy
MARRIAGE
Natural disasters
Nature
Plane accidents
Population
The Inevitable Fill-Up
Population forecasts
Progress in China, Bangladesh, and Vietnam
PROTECTED NATURE
Refusing vaccination
Religions and babies
Risks of dying
Society
Average family size by income
Konzo
Stockholm data
TB and swine flu
Terrorism
TEXTILE
Thank you, industrialization
The Big Inevitable Fill-Up
The Fill Up
The five global risks
The risk of climate change
The risk of extreme poverty
The risk of financial collapse
The risk of global pandemic
The risk of World War III
The state of the environment
TRAVEL
Trend for Number of Children per Woman and Surviving Children
US health spending
Vaccination
Why refugees don’t fly
Unsubscribe
We updated democracy score
What we do
Workshops
World Health Chart
World Health Chart
Gapminder World
Tutorial for Gapminder World
Most people worry about climate change
Upload data
Quick guide to the Motion Chart
Download the data
Doubt
Geography
Changing country borders
West vs. Rest
Documentation
Air accident risk — Documentation
Average age at 1st marriage (girls)
Babies per woman (total fertility rate)
Banning leaded gas — Documentation
Billionaires dataset — Documentation
Caries — Documentation
Child labour – Documentation
Child Mortality Rate, under age five
CO2 EMISSIONS
Death penalty – Documentation
Democracy Index
Drowning — Documentation
Extreme Poverty — Data Documentation
Fertility and income by quintile — Documentation
GD007
GDP per capita in constant PPP dollars
Gini — Data Documentation
Guitars per capita — Documentation
HIV/AIDS: Prevalence and number of people
How the Household’s Incomes on Dollar Street are calculated
Income Mountains Dataset — Documentation
Infant Mortality Rate, under age one
Internet users — Documentation
Legal Slavery v1 — Documentation
Length of Schooling – Documentation
Life Expectancy at Birth
Literacy — Documentation
Maternal mortality ratio
Mean household income — Documentation
Method overview
Technical
New feature films — Documentation
Population
Road deaths — Documentation
Splitting countries by religion
Undernourishment — Documentation
Vaccination coverage — Documentation
West and Rest
Women’s vote — Documentation
World Health Chart, data sources
Downloads
Labs
Gapminder Agriculture
Gapminder China
Gapminder China, India, EU, US
Gapminder USA
Gapminder World Basic – Svenska
Gapminder World Cup
Visualizing Swedish aid data
“The world is getting worse!”
Fact Question 1
Fact Question 10
Fact Question 11
Fact Question 2
Fact Question 3
Fact Question 4
Fact Question 5
Fact Question 6
Fact Question 8
Fact Question 9
Question 12
Question 13
Question 7
Results
Home
>
prize
Nothing Found
It seems we can’t find what you’re looking for. Perhaps searching can help.
Search for:
Gapminder's tools and teaching materials are free, and always will be free.
You can help us by making a donation.
Donate now