Global Monitoring Report includes first-time coverage of Multidimensional Poverty Index

News
09 October 2015
OPHI News

The Global Monitoring Report (GMR) 2015/2016, produced jointly by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, details findings from the Global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) for the first time.

While the report details a decline of those living in global poverty, reclassified as living on $1.90 or less a day, it stresses that ‘Pockets of very deep and multidimensional poverty continue to persist’ and emphasises that ‘more attention is needed to the non-income dimensions of development’ in order to ‘sustainably end extreme poverty and promote shared prosperity’.

The GMR explores multidimensional poverty measurement and profiles the MPI as a possible implementation. In particular, it highlights how the MPI can be broken down to reveal the different types of deprivation faced by the poor across different regions of countries, noting that ‘Breaking down poverty by dimension provides policy makers with localized information for reducing multidimensional poverty’.

The report describes how, according to recent updates of the Global MPI, Niger is the country with the highest rates of multidimensional poverty, while the poorest subnational region in the world is Salamat in southeast Chad, where nearly 98% of inhabitants are MPI poor.  The region with the highest deprivation in nutrition is Affar in Ethiopia, and that with most child mortality is Nord-Ouest in Cote d’Ivoire. Karamoja in Uganda is the most deprived region for sanitation, and Wad Fira in Chad for drinking water, electricity and years of schooling.

The report also highlights how several countries have already implemented their own multidimensional poverty measures, noting that ‘as the post-2015 process unfolds, demand for harmonized multidimensional poverty assessments at the country and global levels is likely to rise.’

The Global MPI is an internationally-comparable measure of acute poverty covering more than 100 developing countries. It has been calculated by OPHI and published in the UN Development Programme’s Human Development Report since 2010. Overall, 1.6 billion people are multidimensionally poor according to the Global MPI, with the largest global share in South Asia and the highest intensity in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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