Among the 36 million people in China who live in 'extreme' poverty, 3.3 to 4 million are children aged 0 to 6 years, a report released by official organisations All-China Women's Federation and National Health and Family Planning Commission said.
The report also showed that the children who suffer from malnourishment are six to eight times more likely to grow at a slower rate than those living in urban areas.
More than half of the children living in extreme poverty suffer from zinc deficiency, state-run Global Times reported today, citing the survey.
Officials say that China continued to have pockets of poverty despite massive development in the last three decades uplifting over 600 million out of poverty.
Last year, China's Poverty Alleviation and Development, (PAD) said under the formula of the dollar a day, over 82 million people in China officially remained below poverty in the world's second largest economy.
The numbers could scale up to 200 million going by the World Bank's calculation of USD 1.25 a day.
At the end of 2013, 82 million people remained in poverty in rural areas, down 16.99 million from 2012, it said, releasing fresh figures of China's poverty alleviation efforts.
The Chinese poverty figures, however, vary from the domestic and international formulae.
According to a standard adopted in 2011, rural residents with an annual net income of about USD 375 or less are classified as 'poor' in China, while 'extreme' poverty, according to the World Bank, is measured by the international poverty line of USD 1.25 a day.
"It's a tough nut to crack. Poverty is a weak point for our goal of building a moderately prosperous society in all respects by 2020," he said.
