posted on 2024-09-06, 06:17authored bySabina Alkire, José Manuel Roche, Andy Sumner
This paper asks where do the world’s multidimensionally poor people live? The paper considers how the
global distribution of multidimensional poverty differs from the global distribution of income poverty
and assesses the sensitivity of findings to widely used (although somewhat arbitrary) country
classifications. Surprisingly perhaps, only a quarter of multidimensionally poor people and just one-third
of severely multidimensionally poor people live in the world’s poorest countries – meaning Low Income
Countries (LICs) or Least Developed Countries (LDCs). The sensitivity of findings about country
thresholds for low and middle-income countries is discussed. The paper argues that there is a split of
distribution poverty between both stable Middle-Income Countries (MICs) and low-income fragile states
and that there is a ‘multidimensional bottom billion’ living in stable MICs.
The analysis is based on 83 countries and uses the 2011 MPI poverty estimates of the UNDP HDR.
History
Citation
Alkire, S., Roche, J.M., and Sumner, A. (2013) Where Do the World’s Multidimensionally Poor People Live? OPHI Working Papers 61. Oxford: University of Oxford.