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The world has continued to seek prosperity by reducing poverty and improving well-being, but it is vital to examine whether this improvement is inclusive. This paper presents a quantile-based assessment of trends based on absolute changes and allows for robust examination of the inclusiveness of multidimensional well-being changes. The overall change in inclusive well-being can be decomposed into two components: the change in the overall average; and the inclusivity premium capturing the extent to which the change in well-being benefits the poorer quantiles. For our empirical illustration, we employ a multidimensional measure of well-being that is closely linked to the flagship global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI). We examine the inclusiveness of multidimensional well-being changes for 75 developing countries across six geographic regions. We observe robust improvements in well-being levels for most countries, but only around three-fifths of these countries overall have positive robust inclusivity premiums, and fewer than one-third in sub-Saharan Africa. Our examination of the relationship between inclusivity premium in multidimensional well-being and the World Bank’s shared prosperity premium in monetary space does not yield any monotonic relationship across countries. Furthermore, despite the close link between our inclusive well-being measure and the global MPI, a successful absolute reduction in the global MPI does not necessarily imply that the corresponding well-being improvement is inclusive. Our proposed framework could play an important role in jointly monitoring the Sustainable Development Goals’ targets of reducing inequality within countries and reducing poverty in multiple dimensions.

Type

Working paper

Publisher

Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative

Publication Date

09/01/2025

Pages

1 - 43

Keywords

counting approach, global MPI, poverty measurement, Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), shared prosperity, inequality, multidimensional poverty, inclusive growth, well-being