The numbers coming out of Sudan have moved past the point of a humanitarian crisis and into the realm of a national erasure.
According to the latest data from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), nearly 70% of the Sudanese population is now living in poverty. To put that into perspective, that is nearly double the pre-war rate of 38%. In just a few years of relentless fighting, the country has effectively wiped out decades of economic progress, with income levels regressing to lows not seen since 1992.
“These are not just numbers,” says Luca Renda of the UNDP. “They represent families torn apart and a generation at risk of losing its future.”
Survival on Two Dollars a Day
The statistical “poverty line” used for these figures is roughly $4 USD per day. However, the reality on the ground is far bleaker: at least a quarter of the population is surviving on less than half of that amount.
In regions like South Kordofan and North Darfur, the social fabric hasn’t just frayed; it has snapped. In these areas, where the war between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) is at its most intense, extreme deprivation affects three out of every four residents.
A Generation Displaced
The war, now in its fourth year, has created a staggering set of milestones:
- Displacement: Over 11 million people have been forced from their homes.
- Hunger: 21 million people are facing severe food insecurity, with famine conditions officially declared in multiple pockets of the country.
- Casualties: While the official death toll is in the tens of thousands, the lack of access for humanitarian observers suggests the true number is much higher.
The conflict has transformed from a political power struggle into a war of attrition against the civilian population. Recent drone strikes in Kordofan and Blue Nile have added to a rising civilian body count, showing that despite international calls for a ceasefire, the violence is actually intensifying.
Stalled Peace and Economic Ruin
As the war grinds on, the international community is looking toward Berlin. A donor conference is scheduled to convene in the German capital to attempt to revive stalled peace negotiations and mobilize a humanitarian response that has, thus far, been chronically underfunded.
For many Sudanese, however, the diplomatic talk feels worlds away from the daily struggle for bread and safety. Analysts warn that with no sign of hostilities subsiding, Sudan is no longer just “at risk” of collapse it is living through it. The extreme poverty levels currently gripping the nation are now worse than those recorded during the devastating crises of the 1980s.
Without a breakthrough in Berlin or on the battlefield, the “State of Sudan” is increasingly becoming a state of permanent emergency.



