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UNCTAD XIII 
4 
6 
articles 
from unctad 
Data on Least 
Developed 
Countries 
Data on Least Developed Countries 
The three country groups of Least Developed 
Countries (LDCs), Land-locked Developing 
Countries (LLDCs) and Small Island Developing 
States (SIDS) are recognized by the United 
Nations as special categories of countries that 
face specific development challenges and, 
accord­ingly, 
need special attention and support 
from the international community. 
Least Developed Countries (LDCs) 
The United Nations created the category of LDCs in 
1971. Currently 48 developing countries from Africa 
(34 countries) Asia (13 countries) and Latin America 
(1 country) are classified as least developed. These 
countries have small and low-productive domestic 
economies that generate only very low per capita 
incomes. In 2010, the average annual gross domestic 
product (GDP) per capita for LDCs amounted to $684. 
Hence, a large share of their populations lives in 
absolute poverty. In addition, LDCs possess of weak 
human assets, which are manifest in high levels of 
undernourishment and child mortality, as well as low 
school enrolment and literacy rates. Moreover, the 
small and undiversified economies of LDCs make these 
countries vulnerable to the vagaries of global markets 
and to natural shocks and disasters. 
The United Nations classifies a country as an LDC 
on the basis of three criteria: 
◆ Low income threshold: Based on a three-year 
average estimate of the gross national income (GNI) 
per capita, currently thresholds are set at $905 for 
possible cases of addition to the list, and at $1,086 
for graduation from LDC status; 
◆ Human development levels, as measured through a 
composite Human Assets Index, based on indicators 
of nutrition, health, secondary school enrolment and 
adult literacy; 
◆ Economic vulnerability, as measured through a 
composite Economic Vulnerability Index, including 
indicators of natural and trade shocks and the 
country’s exposure to them, economic smallness and 
economic remoteness. 
Bilateral and multilateral development partners of 
LDCs have adopted special support measures in 
recognition of the particular problems. The develop­ment 
challenges of LDCs are also on the agenda of 
major international United Nations conferences and 
gatherings. The Fourth United Nations Conference 
on the Least Developed Countries, held in 2011 in 
Istanbul, Turkey, took stock of the current economic 
and social situation in the LDCs and adopted a set of 
develop­ment 
measures and strategies for these coun­tries 
for the decade 2011-2020. The 10-year Istanbul 
Programme of Action (IPoA) lists eight priority areas of 
action: productive capacity; agriculture, food security 
and rural development; trade; commodities; human 
and social development; multiple crises and other 
emerging challenges; mobilizing financial resources for 
develop­ment 
and capacity-building; and good 
governance at all levels. 
The LDCs also benefit from special and differential 
treatment in international economic and financial 
relations, such as non-reciprocal market access prefer­ences. 
Bilateral, regional and multilateral donors and 
financial institutions accord LDCs concessionary terms 
in their decisions on development financing. In the 
area of technical assistance, priority is given to LDCs in 
cooperation programmes of the United Nations, and 
bilateral and other multilateral development partners 
are encouraged to follow similar preferential policies. 
These measures are designed to overcome the struc­tural 
disadvantages that these countries face in an ever 
more complex and competitive world economy, to 
support the development of their physical infrastructure, 
to develop their human resources, and to strengthen 
their national institutional capacities. 
However, the overarching goal of the national 
efforts by LDC governments and the international 
support measures in favour of LDCs is to eradicate 
poverty, achieve internationally agreed development 
goals and enable graduation from the least developed 
country category. So far, three countries have gradu­ated 
from LDC status: Botswana in 1994, Cape Verde in 2007 
and Maldives in 2011. The Istanbul Programme of 
Action stipulates the aim of enabling half the number 
of least developed countries to meet the criteria for 
graduation by 2020.
UNCTAD XIII 
4 
7 
articles 
from unctad 
Merchandise exports and imports of LLDCs, other 
than in the case of costly airfreight, are bound to pass 
through at least one transit country. Although the 
Convention of the Law of Sea stipulates that land-locked 
countries “shall have the right of access to 
and from the sea” and “shall enjoy freedom of 
transit through the territory of transit States by all 
means of transport”, transit traffic operations come 
at a cost in terms of money and time. These additional 
charges are particularly burdensome for developing 
countries. In addition, LLDCs often have only a limited 
choice of transit neighbours. For example, Lesotho is 
completely surrounded by South Africa, Mongolia has 
only two transit neighbours. Uzbekistan is double land-locked, 
ie. the country is surrounded only by other 
landlocked countries. 
The lack of territorial access to the sea bears heavily 
on the development options of these countries. It is 
therefore no surprise that LLDCs are among the 
poorest developing nations. Nearly all LLDCs have a 
low per capita GDP, reflecting low income levels, 
With a view to making graduation irreversible and 
sustainable, the graduating country is granted a three-year 
grace period before graduation effectively takes 
place. The graduating country and its development 
and trade partners are given this grace period to agree 
on a “smooth transition” strategy, so that the possible 
loss of LDC-specific concessions at the time of 
graduation will not disrupt the socio-economic 
development of the country. 
Land-locked developing countries (LLDCs) 
A land-locked country is a country which has no sea-coast. 
Thirty-one developing countries and countries in 
transition that share this geographical particularity 
have joined the Group of Land-locked Developing 
Countries (LLDCs). Fifteen of these countries are 
located in Africa, 12 in Asia, two in Latin America and 
two in Central and Eastern Europe. Despite their 
location on four continents, all LLDCs share common 
problems of high transaction costs in international 
trade operations and remoteness from major markets. 
below 
A hillside slum in 
Port-au-Prince, Haiti, 
where living con­ditions 
have not 
improved since the 
earthquake in 2010 
and most of the 
country’s 10 million 
people live on less 
than $2 a day.
UNCTAD XIII 
4 
8 
articles 
from unctad 
Data on Least 
Developed 
Countries 
land-linked rather than landlocked are measures to 
mitigate the adverse effects of land-lockedness. 
In addition, economic modernization and 
re-specialization, focusing on low bulk, but high 
value trade products and services, such as tourism, 
can help to reduce transport costs. Finally, the advent 
of modern communication technologies provides a 
new range of trade options to these countries by 
promoting the provision of IT-based export services, 
where transport costs and transport distance are 
of less significance. 
Small Island Developing States (SIDS) 
The United Nations has been recognizing the particular 
problems of Small Island Developing States (SIDS) 
since 1994. The development challenges of these 
countries are enormous: SIDS are 33% more vulner­able 
to external shocks with economic consequences 
than non-SIDS developing countries. They are more 
than 12 times more exposed to oil price-related shocks 
than non-SIDS; and SIDS are structurally more vulner­able, 
by at least 8%, to climate change effects than 
non-SIDS developing countries. 
The small size of these countries – seven SIDS 
(Kiribati, Maldives, Samoa, São Tomé and Príncipe, 
Solomon Islands, Tuvalu and Vanuatu) have a total 
population of less than 500,000 people – also their 
often remote location and widely scattered geography 
pose formidable obstacles to national and international 
development efforts. For example, the costs of pro­viding 
basic social and technical infra­structure, 
from 
schools to hospitals and domestic transport to tele­communication, 
are proportionally significantly higher 
than in most other developing countries and often 
exceed the capacity of the small economic base of 
these countries. 
In addition, fragile eco-systems on and around SIDS 
are highly vulnerable to domestic pollution and the 
effects of climate change. In fact, globally induced 
phenomena such as sea level rise pose a very concrete 
threat to the long-term existence and survival of 
several SIDS. 
International support measures in favour of SIDS 
are grounded in the Mauritius Strategy for the Further 
limited domestic savings capacity and a low level of 
economic development. In fact, 16 LLDCs are also 
classified as LDCs. The high transaction cost incurred in 
international trade reduces the international competi­tive­ness 
of these countries, hampers their beneficial 
integration in global value chains and limits the range 
of potential exports and markets in which goods could 
by competitively traded. 
In 2003, the United Nations adopted the Almaty 
Programme of Action which provides a framework 
for cooperation among LLDCs, their transit neigh-bours 
and bilateral and multilateral donors to 
address the specific development hurdles related 
to land-lockedness.” 
Geography may pose severe constraints on econo­mic 
growth and development; however it need not 
spell doom. The examples of developed land-locked 
countries, such as Austria and Switzerland, show that 
the development constraints resulting from land-lockedness 
can successfully be addressed. 
Trade facilitation measures at border crossings and 
modern transport infrastructure in both land-locked 
and transit countries, as well as policies aimed at 
turning LLDCs into hubs of regional integration and 
cooperation arrangements making these countries 
above 
Advancing education 
in LDCs such as 
Timor-Leste will aid 
the development of 
future generations.
UNCTAD XIII 
4 
9 
articles 
from unctad 
promote action at national, regional and international 
levels to support their development, enhance their 
participation in the world economy and achieve 
internationally agreed development goals. 
Through its Division for Africa, LDCs and Special 
Programmes, UNCTAD provides timely, targeted 
research and analysis of development challenges faced 
by these countries, designs innovative policy 
recommendations, delivers tailor-made technical 
assistance and supports intergovernmental processes 
which seek to address their specific problems. The 
division also draws on, applies and articulates the work 
of other UNCTAD divisions in relation to trade, 
finance, investment, enterprise, technology and 
logistics in order to maximize its relevance to the target 
countries and their development partners. 
Implementation of the Programme of Action for the 
Sustainable Development of SIDS, which was adopted 
in 2005. The Mauritius Strategy recognizes the serious­ness 
of the disadvantages most SIDS suffer from in the 
global economy and calls on the inter­national 
commu­nity 
to find a range of answers for these problems. 
UNCTAD and its work on LDCs, LLDCs, and SIDS 
Since its inception in 1964, UNCTAD focuses on the 
world’s poorest and most vulnerable developing 
countries. Specifically, it aims to increase understanding 
and awareness of the development problems of least 
developed countries, as well as countries with specific 
geographical handicaps. Most notably, land-locked 
developing countries and small island developing states 
are impacted by geography. UNCTAD also works to 
List of LDCs 
Afghanistan 
Angola 
Bangladesh 
Benin 
Bhutan 
Burkina Faso 
Burundi 
Cambodia 
Central African Republic 
Chad 
Comoros 
Congo (Democratic 
Republic of the) 
Djibouti 
Equatorial Guinea 
Eritrea 
Ethiopia 
Gambia 
Guinea 
Guinea-Bissau 
Haiti 
Kiribati 
Lao People’s Democratic 
Republic 
Lesotho 
Liberia 
Madagascar 
Malawi 
Mali 
Mauritania 
Mozambique 
Myanmar 
Nepal 
Niger 
Rwanda 
Samoa 
São Tomé and Príncipe 
Senegal 
Sierra Leone 
Solomon Islands 
Somalia 
South Sudan 
Sudan 
Timor-Leste 
Togo 
Tuvalu 
Uganda 
United Republic of 
Tanzania 
Vanuatu 
Yemen 
Zambia 
List of 
Landlocked 
Developing 
Countries 
(LLDCs) 
Afghanistan 
Armenia 
Azerbaijan 
Bhutan 
Bolivia 
Botswana 
Burkina Faso 
Burundi 
Central African Republic 
Chad 
Ethiopia 
Kazakhstan 
Kyrgyzstan 
Lao People’s Democratic 
Republic 
Lesotho 
Macedonia 
Malawi 
Mali 
Moldova 
Mongolia 
Nepal 
Niger 
Paraguay 
Rwanda 
Swaziland 
Tajikistan 
Turkmenistan 
Uganda 
Uzbekistan 
Zambia 
Zimbabwe 
List of Small 
Island 
Developing 
States (SIDS)* 
Antigua and Barbuda 
Bahamas 
Barbados 
Cape Verde 
Comoros 
Dominica 
Fiji 
Grenada 
Jamaica 
Kiribati 
Maldives 
Marshall Islands 
Micronesia 
Mauritius 
Nauru 
Palau 
Papua New Guinea 
São Tomé and Príncipe 
Seychelles 
Solomon Islands 
St Kitts and Nevis 
St Lucia 
St Vincent and the 
Grenadines 
Timor-Leste 
Tonga 
Trinidad and Tobago 
Tuvalu 
Vanuatu 
* The UN has never established criteria 
to determine an official list of SIDS. This 
unofficial list is used by UNCTAD for 
analytical purposes only.

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M marlett speaking notes_eng
 

Uxiiibook 08 ld_cs

  • 1. UNCTAD XIII 4 6 articles from unctad Data on Least Developed Countries Data on Least Developed Countries The three country groups of Least Developed Countries (LDCs), Land-locked Developing Countries (LLDCs) and Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are recognized by the United Nations as special categories of countries that face specific development challenges and, accord­ingly, need special attention and support from the international community. Least Developed Countries (LDCs) The United Nations created the category of LDCs in 1971. Currently 48 developing countries from Africa (34 countries) Asia (13 countries) and Latin America (1 country) are classified as least developed. These countries have small and low-productive domestic economies that generate only very low per capita incomes. In 2010, the average annual gross domestic product (GDP) per capita for LDCs amounted to $684. Hence, a large share of their populations lives in absolute poverty. In addition, LDCs possess of weak human assets, which are manifest in high levels of undernourishment and child mortality, as well as low school enrolment and literacy rates. Moreover, the small and undiversified economies of LDCs make these countries vulnerable to the vagaries of global markets and to natural shocks and disasters. The United Nations classifies a country as an LDC on the basis of three criteria: ◆ Low income threshold: Based on a three-year average estimate of the gross national income (GNI) per capita, currently thresholds are set at $905 for possible cases of addition to the list, and at $1,086 for graduation from LDC status; ◆ Human development levels, as measured through a composite Human Assets Index, based on indicators of nutrition, health, secondary school enrolment and adult literacy; ◆ Economic vulnerability, as measured through a composite Economic Vulnerability Index, including indicators of natural and trade shocks and the country’s exposure to them, economic smallness and economic remoteness. Bilateral and multilateral development partners of LDCs have adopted special support measures in recognition of the particular problems. The develop­ment challenges of LDCs are also on the agenda of major international United Nations conferences and gatherings. The Fourth United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries, held in 2011 in Istanbul, Turkey, took stock of the current economic and social situation in the LDCs and adopted a set of develop­ment measures and strategies for these coun­tries for the decade 2011-2020. The 10-year Istanbul Programme of Action (IPoA) lists eight priority areas of action: productive capacity; agriculture, food security and rural development; trade; commodities; human and social development; multiple crises and other emerging challenges; mobilizing financial resources for develop­ment and capacity-building; and good governance at all levels. The LDCs also benefit from special and differential treatment in international economic and financial relations, such as non-reciprocal market access prefer­ences. Bilateral, regional and multilateral donors and financial institutions accord LDCs concessionary terms in their decisions on development financing. In the area of technical assistance, priority is given to LDCs in cooperation programmes of the United Nations, and bilateral and other multilateral development partners are encouraged to follow similar preferential policies. These measures are designed to overcome the struc­tural disadvantages that these countries face in an ever more complex and competitive world economy, to support the development of their physical infrastructure, to develop their human resources, and to strengthen their national institutional capacities. However, the overarching goal of the national efforts by LDC governments and the international support measures in favour of LDCs is to eradicate poverty, achieve internationally agreed development goals and enable graduation from the least developed country category. So far, three countries have gradu­ated from LDC status: Botswana in 1994, Cape Verde in 2007 and Maldives in 2011. The Istanbul Programme of Action stipulates the aim of enabling half the number of least developed countries to meet the criteria for graduation by 2020.
  • 2. UNCTAD XIII 4 7 articles from unctad Merchandise exports and imports of LLDCs, other than in the case of costly airfreight, are bound to pass through at least one transit country. Although the Convention of the Law of Sea stipulates that land-locked countries “shall have the right of access to and from the sea” and “shall enjoy freedom of transit through the territory of transit States by all means of transport”, transit traffic operations come at a cost in terms of money and time. These additional charges are particularly burdensome for developing countries. In addition, LLDCs often have only a limited choice of transit neighbours. For example, Lesotho is completely surrounded by South Africa, Mongolia has only two transit neighbours. Uzbekistan is double land-locked, ie. the country is surrounded only by other landlocked countries. The lack of territorial access to the sea bears heavily on the development options of these countries. It is therefore no surprise that LLDCs are among the poorest developing nations. Nearly all LLDCs have a low per capita GDP, reflecting low income levels, With a view to making graduation irreversible and sustainable, the graduating country is granted a three-year grace period before graduation effectively takes place. The graduating country and its development and trade partners are given this grace period to agree on a “smooth transition” strategy, so that the possible loss of LDC-specific concessions at the time of graduation will not disrupt the socio-economic development of the country. Land-locked developing countries (LLDCs) A land-locked country is a country which has no sea-coast. Thirty-one developing countries and countries in transition that share this geographical particularity have joined the Group of Land-locked Developing Countries (LLDCs). Fifteen of these countries are located in Africa, 12 in Asia, two in Latin America and two in Central and Eastern Europe. Despite their location on four continents, all LLDCs share common problems of high transaction costs in international trade operations and remoteness from major markets. below A hillside slum in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, where living con­ditions have not improved since the earthquake in 2010 and most of the country’s 10 million people live on less than $2 a day.
  • 3. UNCTAD XIII 4 8 articles from unctad Data on Least Developed Countries land-linked rather than landlocked are measures to mitigate the adverse effects of land-lockedness. In addition, economic modernization and re-specialization, focusing on low bulk, but high value trade products and services, such as tourism, can help to reduce transport costs. Finally, the advent of modern communication technologies provides a new range of trade options to these countries by promoting the provision of IT-based export services, where transport costs and transport distance are of less significance. Small Island Developing States (SIDS) The United Nations has been recognizing the particular problems of Small Island Developing States (SIDS) since 1994. The development challenges of these countries are enormous: SIDS are 33% more vulner­able to external shocks with economic consequences than non-SIDS developing countries. They are more than 12 times more exposed to oil price-related shocks than non-SIDS; and SIDS are structurally more vulner­able, by at least 8%, to climate change effects than non-SIDS developing countries. The small size of these countries – seven SIDS (Kiribati, Maldives, Samoa, São Tomé and Príncipe, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu and Vanuatu) have a total population of less than 500,000 people – also their often remote location and widely scattered geography pose formidable obstacles to national and international development efforts. For example, the costs of pro­viding basic social and technical infra­structure, from schools to hospitals and domestic transport to tele­communication, are proportionally significantly higher than in most other developing countries and often exceed the capacity of the small economic base of these countries. In addition, fragile eco-systems on and around SIDS are highly vulnerable to domestic pollution and the effects of climate change. In fact, globally induced phenomena such as sea level rise pose a very concrete threat to the long-term existence and survival of several SIDS. International support measures in favour of SIDS are grounded in the Mauritius Strategy for the Further limited domestic savings capacity and a low level of economic development. In fact, 16 LLDCs are also classified as LDCs. The high transaction cost incurred in international trade reduces the international competi­tive­ness of these countries, hampers their beneficial integration in global value chains and limits the range of potential exports and markets in which goods could by competitively traded. In 2003, the United Nations adopted the Almaty Programme of Action which provides a framework for cooperation among LLDCs, their transit neigh-bours and bilateral and multilateral donors to address the specific development hurdles related to land-lockedness.” Geography may pose severe constraints on econo­mic growth and development; however it need not spell doom. The examples of developed land-locked countries, such as Austria and Switzerland, show that the development constraints resulting from land-lockedness can successfully be addressed. Trade facilitation measures at border crossings and modern transport infrastructure in both land-locked and transit countries, as well as policies aimed at turning LLDCs into hubs of regional integration and cooperation arrangements making these countries above Advancing education in LDCs such as Timor-Leste will aid the development of future generations.
  • 4. UNCTAD XIII 4 9 articles from unctad promote action at national, regional and international levels to support their development, enhance their participation in the world economy and achieve internationally agreed development goals. Through its Division for Africa, LDCs and Special Programmes, UNCTAD provides timely, targeted research and analysis of development challenges faced by these countries, designs innovative policy recommendations, delivers tailor-made technical assistance and supports intergovernmental processes which seek to address their specific problems. The division also draws on, applies and articulates the work of other UNCTAD divisions in relation to trade, finance, investment, enterprise, technology and logistics in order to maximize its relevance to the target countries and their development partners. Implementation of the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of SIDS, which was adopted in 2005. The Mauritius Strategy recognizes the serious­ness of the disadvantages most SIDS suffer from in the global economy and calls on the inter­national commu­nity to find a range of answers for these problems. UNCTAD and its work on LDCs, LLDCs, and SIDS Since its inception in 1964, UNCTAD focuses on the world’s poorest and most vulnerable developing countries. Specifically, it aims to increase understanding and awareness of the development problems of least developed countries, as well as countries with specific geographical handicaps. Most notably, land-locked developing countries and small island developing states are impacted by geography. UNCTAD also works to List of LDCs Afghanistan Angola Bangladesh Benin Bhutan Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Central African Republic Chad Comoros Congo (Democratic Republic of the) Djibouti Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Ethiopia Gambia Guinea Guinea-Bissau Haiti Kiribati Lao People’s Democratic Republic Lesotho Liberia Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mozambique Myanmar Nepal Niger Rwanda Samoa São Tomé and Príncipe Senegal Sierra Leone Solomon Islands Somalia South Sudan Sudan Timor-Leste Togo Tuvalu Uganda United Republic of Tanzania Vanuatu Yemen Zambia List of Landlocked Developing Countries (LLDCs) Afghanistan Armenia Azerbaijan Bhutan Bolivia Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Central African Republic Chad Ethiopia Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Lao People’s Democratic Republic Lesotho Macedonia Malawi Mali Moldova Mongolia Nepal Niger Paraguay Rwanda Swaziland Tajikistan Turkmenistan Uganda Uzbekistan Zambia Zimbabwe List of Small Island Developing States (SIDS)* Antigua and Barbuda Bahamas Barbados Cape Verde Comoros Dominica Fiji Grenada Jamaica Kiribati Maldives Marshall Islands Micronesia Mauritius Nauru Palau Papua New Guinea São Tomé and Príncipe Seychelles Solomon Islands St Kitts and Nevis St Lucia St Vincent and the Grenadines Timor-Leste Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tuvalu Vanuatu * The UN has never established criteria to determine an official list of SIDS. This unofficial list is used by UNCTAD for analytical purposes only.