Economic Theory, Freedom and Human Rights: The Work of Amartya Sen
Author: Overseas Development Institute
Date: 2001
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4 pages
(50 KB)
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What are the central tenets of the work of the Nobel Prize winning economist Professor Amartya Sen? How have these changed development approaches? This review, by the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), shows how his work has contributed to important paradigm shifts in economics and development. There has been a move away from approaches that focus exclusively on income, growth and utility, with an increased emphasis on individual entitlements, capabilities, freedoms and rights.
In the past, dominant approaches have characterised development in terms of GDP per capita, food security in terms of food availability and poverty in terms of income deprivation. Emphasis was placed on economic efficiency with no explicit role given to fundamental freedoms, individual agency and human rights. In contrast, Sen's research has highlighted the central idea that market outcomes and government actions should be judged in terms of valuable human ends. It has increased awareness of the importance of respect for human rights for socio-economic outcomes, challenging the proposition that growth should take priority over civil and political rights, while highlighting the role of human rights in promoting economic security, and the limitations of development without human rights guarantees.
In the past, poverty and hunger were often excluded from dominant discourses on fundamental freedoms and human rights. Sen has challenged this approach. His empirical work suggests that:
Sen's contributions include proposals for incorporating individual entitlements, capabilities, freedoms and rights into the conceptual foundations and technical apparatus of economics and social choice. These proposals reflect a number of central recurring themes including:
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Source:
Overseas Development Institute (ODI), 2001, 'Economic Theory, Freedom and Human Rights: The Work of Amartya Sen', ODI Briefing Paper, ODI, London
Author:
Overseas Development Institute (ODI), http://www.odi.org.uk/