More than half of Central Asia’s population is under the age of 30, says UNICEF report

Central Asian countries stand to increase their GDP per capita by 6 to 14 percent above projected levels by 2050 if they significantly scale up investments in the health, education, and development of children, according to a new UNICEF report released on Wednesday. Titled Generation 2050: Investing in Tomorrow, Today, the report highlights that more […]

Asia-Plus

Central Asian countries stand to increase their GDP per capita by 6 to 14 percent above projected levels by 2050 if they significantly scale up investments in the health, education, and development of children, according to a new UNICEF report released on Wednesday.

Titled Generation 2050: Investing in Tomorrow, Today, the report highlights that more than half of the region’s population is under the age of 30, yet human capital across Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan remains critically underdeveloped. Nearly two-thirds of the potential economic gains identified in the report would come from a healthier, more skilled, and more productive workforce.

UNICEF warns that without urgent and sustained action, Central Asia could miss a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reap the benefits of its demographic transition. The region’s population is expected to grow by over 30 million people by 2050, with the proportion of working-age adults peaking within the next 15 years.

Currently, children born in Central Asia are expected to reach only 50 to 60 percent of their full productive potential due to gaps in health and education, according to the World Bank’s Human Capital Index. As populations begin to age after 2040, the chance to leverage this demographic dividend could quickly vanish unless bold reforms are made.

Beyond the economic implications, the report emphasizes the broader societal value of investing in youth. Strengthening human capital can foster social cohesion, promote gender equality, and enhance resilience to climate change, migration, and rapid urbanization. Around 15 million children in the region are already highly vulnerable to climate-related impacts, and migration continues to disrupt the lives of millions of families.

Generation 2050 lays out a portfolio of targeted, cost-effective investments that could radically transform outcomes for children and young people in Central Asia. Key recommendations include:

·         Ensuring universal early childhood development and quality education through secondary school.

·         Expanding essential health and nutrition services, with a focus on maternal, newborn, and adolescent care.

·         Strengthening child and social protection systems to support every child and family.

·         Equipping youth with skills for the green and digital economy, alongside proactive labor-market policies.

·         Providing access to safe water, sanitation, and climate-resilient infrastructure, especially in vulnerable communities.

The report also calls for greater regional cooperation, stressing that shared labor markets, environmental challenges, and demographic shifts bind the futures of the five Central Asian nations. Coordinated strategies in skills development, climate adaptation, and financing can drive progress faster and more efficiently than isolated national efforts.

UNICEF’s findings underscore a critical message: Investing in children and youth today is not only a moral imperative—it is a smart economic strategy for the region’s long-term stability and prosperity.

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