Resumen
This article examines the concept of live well-good living, by analyzing its contributions and limitations. This worldview has a normative horizon more ambitious than the development paradigm, as it wagers for a poverty and wealth conception that is not limited to the accumulation of material goods, but it is an economy aware of its effects on nature and the satisfaction of needs and the decolonizing of knowledge. Nevertheless, it is characterized by an operationalization deficit that is shown through the difficulty to establish specific policies and accurate indicators of measurement.