In 1820, the ability to read was a privilege reserved for a small elite. Priests. Nobles. Merchants in capital cities. In England — at the time the world's leading industrial power — roughly a third of men could read. In France, less than half. In India, China, and sub-Saharan Africa, literacy was functionally confined to religious scribes and court administrators. Of the roughly one billion people alive in 1820, approximately 120 million — twelve percent — could read.
In 2023, 6.8 billion people — 87% of the world's population — are literate.
The inversion is total. What was the rare exception — literacy — is now the global baseline. What was the overwhelming norm — illiteracy — survives only in pockets, diminishing with each generation. This transformation happened within a recognizable historical timeframe: approximately seven human lifespans. It happened through a compounding combination of economic development, technological change, state institution-building, and the intrinsic human desire to learn and participate.
It is one of the most consequential expansions of human capability ever recorded. It is almost completely absent from public discourse about human progress.
The Numbers Across Two Centuries
The trajectory of global literacy, documented by researchers Max Roser and Esteban Ortiz-Ospina at Our World in Data, drawing on historical sources and UNESCO records, looks like this:
1820: ~12% of the world population literate. Literacy is a class privilege in virtually every society on earth.
1900: ~21% literate. The expansion of compulsory primary education in Europe and North America begins the first mass literacy wave. Still, four in five people on earth cannot read.
1950: ~36% literate. Decolonization brings new education investments across Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Economic growth creates demand for literate workers.
2023: ~87% literate. 6.8 billion people. The global population tripled since 1950, yet the absolute number of illiterate adults has fallen from approximately 4.5 billion in the 1970s to under 770 million today. More people are alive who can read than at any previous point in human history, by a factor of more than fifty.
Youth literacy — the indicator for where the trend is heading — is now 92% globally. The generation currently in school will be the most literate in human history. In the countries where adult illiteracy remains highest — parts of sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and rural Central America — the youth literacy rate has already diverged sharply from the adult rate, meaning the structural condition is reversing in the most important cohort.
The Mechanism: Markets, Not Mandates
The standard narrative attributes literacy expansion primarily to government education programs and UNESCO campaigns. The data paints a more complicated and more instructive picture.
India increased its literacy rate by more than 40 percentage points in 40 years — one of the fastest large-population literacy expansions in history. The acceleration began not with a government literacy campaign but with economic liberalization in 1991. When parents' incomes rise, they invest in their children's education, particularly their daughters' education. When local economies develop, employers require literate workers. Market demand for literacy drove enrollment more powerfully than compulsory attendance laws.
Bangladesh's literacy rate, cited above, tells the same story — amplified by the emergence of microfinance institutions (most famously Grameen Bank) that gave rural women access to capital and, in so doing, both required and incentivized literacy for loan management. The literacy intervention was embedded inside an economic intervention. You cannot separate them.
Sub-Saharan Africa — long cited by pessimists as evidence that literacy progress was impossible in certain cultural or geographic contexts — has seen adult literacy rise to 65% and rising, with youth literacy substantially higher. The mechanism here too is primarily economic: mobile-phone penetration creating demand for digital literacy, urbanization concentrating populations in areas with better school access, economic growth funding public investment in education infrastructure.
The Maslow connection is direct and important. Literacy is the gateway to every dimension of the arc above survival. Health information, economic participation, civic life, self-actualization, cultural creation — all of these depend on the ability to read. When literacy expands, it doesn't just add a skill. It unlocks a cascade of human capability that compounds for generations.