The Global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) assesses the nature and intensity of poverty at the individual level, by directly measuring the overlapping deprivations poor people experience simultaneously.
But who are these people? To answer this question, we spoke with some people who were poor according to the Global MPI. We learned about their lives – their hopes and strengths, and their challenges. Naturally their lives are far richer than any measure can capture. You can hear and read some of their stories below.
Maria, a 45-year-old single mother from Ecuador who completed primary education, lives with her two children, one who is 4 years old and another who is 9 years old. Maria had a third pregnancy but sadly her last child died during birth because she did not receive proper medical care. Maria and her kids live… Read on
Tamang, a 56-year-old landless woman from an indigenous minority caste, lives near a remote jungle in Nepal with her husband, who is living with significant disabilities and a low body mass index (less than 18.5), and two granddaughters, who are attending school, the older of whom just started 7th grade… Read on.
Kari is a 45-year-old woman who lives in her birthplace village in Bihar, India. She was married to her husband when she was 13, and they have a son and three daughters. The family is Hindu and belongs to the Musahar caste… Read on.
Amudha is a 14-year-old student in 10th grade at a school in a small rural community near Madurai. She lives with her father, mother, sister, nephew and niece… Read on.
Pre-2018 Global MPI Case Studies
India
Aruna
Aruna, her husband, and their four children live beside the railway tracks beneath a bridge in Mumbai, India. Their only light comes from the streetlights, and they rely on a pay-and-use toilet, which closes at night, for water and sanitation…
Bibi Ayesha
Bibi Ayesha is a 55-year-old woman who lives in a wooden box-like structure on stilts near a temple in Delhi. Unable to walk after an accident, she uses a hand-pedaled tricycle to get around and cleans a nearby homeless shelter to earn a little money…
Eknath
Life has improved for 15-year-old Eknath, who lives with his mother, sister-in-law, and four brothers in Goa. They still don’t have a toilet and the roof leaks during the monsoon, but they do have electricity, a TV, and a water tap in front of their home…
Cameroon
Nathalie
Nathalie is a vivacious 20-year-old in the northeast of Cameroon. Nathalie is married, and she and her husband’s other wife together have five children. The family lives in rudimentary huts with earth floors, and have no sanitation…
Salihine
Salihine, 40, lives in Touboro with his wife, mother, sibling and five children. He works three to four jobs to try to provide for his family, farming cereals and cotton, working as a bricklayer and construction worker, and collecting wood as well…
Rosaline
Rosaline, 55, and her extended household cultivate peanuts, millet and other cereals in Guidiguis. However, without modern farming equipment and with the earth dry and hard, the returns on their hard labour are meagre…
Issa
Issa, 67, suffered an accident at work 12 years ago and can no longer earn money as a construction worker or by farming. These days he makes a living by teaching local children the Koran and is proud of his contribution, but his family are intensely poor…
Bhutan
Phuba
Phuba is 72 years old and lives with her son, daughter-in-law and their child, her granddaughter, Pelden. Phuba brims with life and walks quickly up the mountain paths with a stick. Though being sick is a worry, Phuba is proud because even at her advanced age, she remains strong.
Sangay is 58 years old and lives in a small Bhutanese village with his wife Mindu and their three children. Sangay is a lay monk which means that, though he has no fixed job, he is always on call, ready to help when any member of the village needs him to come to their home.
Sonam
Sonam is 45 years old and lives with her five children. She was married for over 20 years, but her husband no longer lives at home with the rest of the family. She farms her own land and earns money by working on other peoples’ land. This extra income helps to pay for her children’s education.
Tashi and Jamyang
Tashi and Jamyang live with their three children in a small Bhutanese village. With their land and work as casual labourers they have enough to eat for the family’s basic needs. However they don’t have enough money to construct a durable house, so they live in a thatched hut.
Dominican Republic
Manuel and Lola
Manuel and Lola live in the Dominican Republic with their 10-year old daughter. He works as a farmer, selling what he can. She’d like to have a business or trade of her own and says “Life is not good…We need money—not that I need money, but we need money for doctors”.
Pedro and Mercedes
Pedro and Mercedes live with their three children. He is a small-scale farmer, growing chillies to sell. They are MPI poor primarily because their living conditions are of poor quality. He says: “I want to help my children, to get them educated.”
Rolando
Rolando is 61 years old and lives with his wife, Beatriz. To get by, he picks left over coffee from the ground at a nearby coffee plantation. He picks the coffee that falls to the ground and would be otherwise lost. “I get to it before the rats do,” is how he describes this work.
India
Rabiya
Rabiya, 35, lives with her with two teenage sons in Bihar, India’s poorest state. To support her sons, and owning no land of her own, she works as a daily wage-labourer on the fields of local farmers, often for a fraction of the legal minimum wage…
Adil
Adil, 32, lives with his wife, two daughters and son in a poor hamlet in the Indian state of West Bengal. Twice a year he leaves his family behind to seek employment in Mumbai. He worries about them when he’s gone, but says “we now have three meals a day, instead of the one or two that we could barely manage before I left”…
Kari
Kari, 45, lives with her husband in a village in Bihar, India. Although she and her husband were unable to send their three grown daughters to school, she says that “we never saw our three girls as liabilities, and were very happy when they were born. They grew up to be fine young women, who have made us proud”…
Kenya
Ann-Sophia
Ann Sophia, 37, is a single parent living with her four children in a slum, just outside Nairobi. She suffers from a debilitating illness which seriously impacts her life, but is unable to afford the necessary treatment…
Dalma
With her husband and seven children, Dalma, 30, lives in a Nairobi slum. Their earnings are often not enough to support the family with food and other essentials, but she encourages her children to go to school to keep them happy and occupied and to use the school’s feeding programme …
Tabitha
Tabitha, 44, lives with her family in a poor area of Nairobi. The main breadwinner, she depends on casual jobs like washing clothes or finding old clothes in the rubbish dump to sell. Despite her low income, her four school-aged children attend school and she has high hopes for their future…
Madagascar
Agathe
Agathe, around 70 years old, lives with six members of her family. She collects used cans and bottles from the rubbish tip to sell and is keen to remain independent. When her children offer to support her she replies: “I must have money in my pocket for my tobacco”…
Stéphanie
Aged 35, Stéphanie lives in a small makeshift cabin, with a dirt floor and no water or electricity, in one of the poorest areas of Antananarivo, Madagascar. A single parent, she lives with her four children and granddaughter, and is her family’s main breadwinner. She supports them by selling salvaged garbage, and with the proceeds buys the family’s dinner (usually their only main meal)…
Valérie
Valérie, 32, lives in one of the poorest areas of Madagascar’s capital city with her husband and three children. They live in a little cabin made of recovered wood with a roof made of plastic bags. Her children used to go to primary school but left recently because Valérie and her husband were behind with the fees…
Indonesia
Endah
Fifty-five year old Endah lives with her mother, 90, and her two sons outside the city of Sragen, Indonesia. She collects dry grass to trade as animal food in return for money. She wishes most of all for a better home and more support in caring for her severely disabled son…
Jiyem
Jiyem is around 70 years old and lives with her blind husband, her son (who is mentally handicapped), her daughter in law, and their malnourished three-year-old grandson. She is able to make jokes and laugh but her situation is very precarious. “I cannot picture what wellbeing means,” she says…
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