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An Inquiry into Well-Being and Destitution [Paperback]

Partha Dasgupta (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

August 24, 1995 0198288352 978-0198288350
How should economic and social theory accommodate empirical facts about physical destitution, and how should governments respond to famines and hunger? This interdisciplinary book focuses on these and other questions about physical being. Dasgupta's aim here is to offer a description of destitution as it occurs among rural populations of the poor countries of Asia, Africa, and Latin America; to give an account of the forces at work which perpetuate destitution, and to offer prescriptions for both the public and private spheres of life.

A central concern of the author has been to reconcile theoretical considerations with the empirical evidence that has been obtained in the several disciplines this work encompasses, including anthropology, demography, ecology, geography, and philosophy. The entire discussion is designed to provide a philosophy for human well-being that can guide public policy in poor countries. Therefore, the role of the State, of communities, of households, and of individuals is studied in considerable detail.

The author reveals an empirical link between greater political and civil liberties and improvements in life expectancy at birth, national income per capita, and infant survival rates. He identifies patterns of asset redistribution that promote economic growth by raising labor productivity, and argues that democratic participation in the design of public policies is not only intrinsically valuable, but has strong instrumental virtues: it allows privately held information to be put into effective use. Dasgupta presents evidence to show that significant reductions in military budgets would free the resources needed for the satisfaction of citizens' basic economic needs, and he provides guidance for the motivation and necessary focus of governments. He also looks at the allocation of food, work, health care, education, and income across genders, age groups, and orders of birth. He explores the findings of nutritionists on the link between food needs and work capacity, and develops a language to allow the environment to be included in social policies and calculations. By covering an unprecedented range of material, An Inquiry into Well-Being and Destitution becomes required reading for all those concerned with the human situation and the plight of the destitute.

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Editorial Reviews

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"A work of encyclopedic learning and matching ambition....an unusual combination of boldness and subtlety....His passing remarks on how many recalcitrant facts a theory can decently leave unexplained would provoke a class in the philosophy of science. His discussion of recent ideas about the duties one generation owes to the next would provoke another. I suspect that there are more economists who can appreciate Dasgupta's moral philosophy than philosophers who can appreciate his economics, but both will surely benefit from reading his arguments. In spite of the grimness of much of his subject matter, the book yields the pleasure that only a very clever thinker can give his readers."--New York Review of Books


"There is much in the book that readers from different disciplines, including anthropology, sociology, and political science, will find informative, insightful, and instructive....Dasgupta's excursion into moral philosophy is illuminating and informative."--Journal of Economic Literature


"The book is of considerable value for anyone involved in research on economics and public policy, theoretical or empirical. The more theoretical sections are applicable to a much wider range of issues, and the presentations in general are sufficiently compartmentalized that the work can be treated almost as a kind of encyclopedia of philosophical, statistical, economic and policy issues....The book is perhaps even more important, however, from the perspective of political theory and political science, for what it offers by way of philosophical foundations for making the elimination of destitution a priority, and how such a concern translates into policy recommendations for reducing the incidence of destitution in the world."--American Political Science Review


"An Inquiry into Well-Being and Destitution is in many ways as impressive as Hume, Smith and Marx themselves."--London Review of Books


"What makes this book of special interest to physicians with broad social concerns is the meticulous and penetrating examination of the economic consequences and costs of malnutrition and ill health and of the obligations of society, and government, in the face of such costs....A serious and important book."--New England Journal of Medicine


About the Author


Partha Dasgupta is Professor of Economics at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of St. John's College. He was also Professor of Economics, Professor of Philosophy, and Director of the Program in Ethics in Society at Stanford University from 1989-1992. He is Research Advisor to the United Nations University's World Institute for Development Economics Research, Chairman of the Beijer International Institute of Ecological Economics, and Senior Research Fellow of the Institute for Policy Reform.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 680 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (August 24, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0198288352
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198288350
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,243,534 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars An unusual and excellent textbook, March 15, 2010
This review is from: An Inquiry into Well-Being and Destitution (Paperback)
This book may not be as well-known and widely studied in graduate programs as, say, Deaton's "The analysis of household surveys" or Bardhan and Udry's "Development microeconomics", but it's an excellent book nonetheless. Professor Dasgupta writes uncommonly well, and despite the sometimes technical nature of the material, large sections of this book flow so naturally that the book often feels more like a collection of essays rather than a textbook.

The only drawback of this book is that at the time of writing (2010) it is already about 15 years old. Micro-development economics has seen remarkable progress since then. Also, the topics covered are somewhat selected and there is much focus on material which is now not as "popular" as it used to be. But every author needs to make choices, after all, so this is not really a drawback after all. Rather, it's something you need to keep in mind if you want to build a library spanning most central topics in micro-development economics nowadays. If that is what you want to do, then I would add to this book Deaton and Bardhan & Udry (see above) and Volumes I, III and IV of the Handbooks of Development Economics (Elsevier). Keep in mind that the Handbook volumes are very expensive and if you google hard enough on the web you can find several chapters online for free.

Going back to the book, now, I fully agree with another reviewer about 1. the impressive bibliography (which takes pages 546-625!!) and 2. the fact that the section on nutrition/malnutrition is wonderful. I would also add that the sections on gender (especially those that focus on India) and those that cover the literature on intra-household allocation of resources are excellent as well. The latter sections, however, are "old" enough that many of the most recent development are not covered (in particular, all the wonderful literature born out of the work by Chiappori and coauthors).

Anyway, overall an unusual and wonderful textbook, highly recommended for someone who wants to do research in development economics. Keep in mind that if you do not have at least a solid college major in economics many parts of this book will be very hard to follow. Although the book is less formal and technical than most graduate textbooks, many pages remain devoted to the discussion of math-intensive models. Of course, all the material should be completely accessible to anyone with (or in the process of getting) a PhD in economics.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Two aspects of personhood have alternated in dominating the thinking of social philosophers over the centuries, each true in itself, but each quite incomplete without the other. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
aggregate labour power, modern resource allocation theory, normative population theory, social evaluation function, active tissue mass, muscle cell mass, potential labour power, full optimum, competitive price mechanism, hunger insurance, expositional ease, dietary thermogenesis, alienation point, intrapersonal variations, casual labour market, optimal programme, environmental resource base, nutrition intake, income lotteries, competitive market mechanism, headcount index, efficient productivity, deontological reasoning, resource allocation mechanisms, chronic energy deficiency
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Saharan Africa, World Bank, Genesis Problem, Latin America, Sri Lanka, United States, West Bengal, Second Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Economics, South Asia, South Korea, Repugnant Conclusion, United Nations, Amiya Dasgupta, Sierra Leone, Das Gupta, Pareto-plus Principle, Western Europe, Borda Rule, Costa Rica, Mere Addition Paradox, Minimal State, West Germany, Matlab Thana, Professor Rawls, Tamil Nadu
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