The UNDP’s new Multidimensional Poverty Measure Index (MPI) is even more revealing. Ghana’s MPI is 0.140, giving it a ranking of 57, which is the same country ranking that Ghana holds on the fraction of population living on less than $1.25 a day. In contrast, CIV’s MPI rank is much lower at 78 with a value of 0.320—more than double the level of Ghana—and substantially worse than predicted by CIV’s income poverty ranking. CIV is about halfway between the best performer (Slovakia and Slovenia at 0.000) and the worst performer (Nigeria at 0.642); but Ghana’s score is well under a quarter of the way from no poverty to the poverty level of Niger.