MPI: Professor Geranda Notten's contribution to a powerful tool for better understanding and combating poverty in Canada

Professors
Social justice
Faculty of Social Sciences
Economy
Professor Geranda Notten

The Material Deprivation Index (MPI) represents a major step forward in the fight against poverty in Canada. Unlike traditional measures based solely on income, such as the Market Basket Measure (MBM), the MPI offers a more complete and nuanced understanding of the reality of poverty by taking into account access to goods and services essential for an acceptable standard of living.

This index sheds light on hidden poverty in Canada by evaluating concrete situations deemed necessary by the majority of Canadians for a decent standard of living. For example, the MPI checks whether a person can keep their home at a comfortable temperature all year round, including a total of eleven similar criteria. In 2023, the MPI reveals that one in four Canadians aged 18 and over is unable to afford at least two of these items, and of these, 6 million have incomes above the poverty line. This is due to the inability of official measures of income poverty to capture the diversity of individual needs and situations, such as variations in housing costs or medical expenses not covered by employers.

Professor Geranda Notten's contribution to this project testifies to her commitment to knowledge mobilization. Her expertise in comparative public policy, and more specifically in poverty and social protection, has been essential to the development of this indispensable tool for understanding and combating poverty. As a full professor in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Ottawa, Geranda Notten inspires the next generation of researchers and policy-makers to approach complex social issues with rigor and compassion. Her work on IPM is a concrete example of how academic research can have a direct and positive impact on society by providing decision-makers with tools to better understand and respond to the needs of vulnerable populations.

Read more about it on Collabzium.