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14 October 1998
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1998 Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, to
Professor Amartya Sen, Trinity College, Cambridge, U.K. (citizen of India)
for his contributions to welfare economics.
Social Choice, Welfare Distributions,
and Poverty
Amartya Sen has made several key contributions to the research on
fundamental problems in welfare economics. His contributions
range from axiomatic theory of social choice, over definitions of
welfare and poverty indexes, to empirical studies of famine. They
are tied closely together by a general interest in distributional
issues and a particular interest in the most impoverished members
of society. Sen has clarified the conditions which permit
aggregation of individual values into collective decisions, and
the conditions which permit rules for collective decision making
that are consistent with a sphere of rights for the individual.
By analyzing the available information about different
individuals' welfare when collective decisions are made, he has
improved the theoretical foundation for comparing different
distributions of society's welfare and defined new, and more
satisfactory, indexes of poverty. In empirical studies, Sen's
applications of his theoretical approach have enhanced our
understanding of the economic mechanisms underlying famines.
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Can the values which individual members of society attach to different alternatives be aggregated into values for society as a whole, in a way that is both fair and theoretically sound? Is the majority principle a workable decision rule? How should income inequality be measured? When and how can we compare the distribution of welfare in different societies? How should we best determine whether poverty is on the decline? What are the factors that trigger famines? By answering questions such as these, Amartya Sen has made a number of noteworthy contributions to central fields of economic science and opened up new fields of study for subsequent generations of researchers. By combining tools from economics and philosophy, he has restored an ethical dimension to the discussion of vital economic problems.
Individual Values and Collective
Decisions
When there is general agreement, the choices made by society are
uncontroversial. When opinions differ, the problem is to find
methods for bringing together different opinions in decisions
which concern everyone. The theory of social choice is
preoccupied precisely with this link between individual values
and collective choice. Fundamental questions are whether - and,
if so, in what way - preferences for society as a whole can be
consistently derived from the preferences of its members. The
answers are crucial for the feasibility of ranking, or otherwise
evaluating, different social states and thereby constructing
meaningful measures of social welfare.
Majority rule
Majority voting is perhaps the most common rule for making
collective decisions. A long time ago, this rule was found to
have serious deficiencies, in addition to the fact that it may
allow a majority to suppress a minority. In some situations it
may pay off to vote strategically (i.e. by not voting for the
preferred alternative), or to manipulate the order in which
different alternatives are voted upon. Voting between pairs of
alternatives sometimes fails to produce a clear result in a
group. A majority may thus prefer alternative a to
alternative b whereas a (second) majority prefers b
to c ; meanwhile, a (third) majority prefers c to
a. In the wake of this kind of "intransitivity", the
decision rule cannot select an alternative that is unambiguously
best for any majority. In collaboration with Prasanta Pattanaik,
Amartya Sen has specified the general conditions that
eliminate intransitivities of majority rule.
In the early 1950s, such problems associated with rules for collective choice motivated economics laureate Kenneth Arrow (1972) to examine possible rules for aggregating individual preferences (values, votes), where majority rule was only one of many alternatives. His surprising but fundamental result was that no aggregation (decision) rule exists that fulfills five conditions (axioms), each of which appears very reasonable on its own.
This so-called impossibility theorem seemed to be an insurmountable obstacle to progress in the normative branch of economics for a long time. How could individual preferences be aggregated and different social states evaluated in a theoretically satisfactory way? Sen's contributions from the mid-1960s onwards were instrumental in alleviating this pessimism. His work not only enriched the principles of social choice theory; they also opened up new and important fields of study. Sen's monograph Collective Choice and Social Welfare from 1970 was particularly influential and inspired many researchers to renew their interest in basic welfare issues. Its style, interspersing formally and philosophically oriented chapters, gave the economic analysis of normative problems a new dimension. In the book as well as many separate articles, Sen treated problems such as: majority rule, individual rights, and the availability of information about individual welfare.
Individual rights
A self-evident prerequisite for a collective decision-making rule
is that it should be "non-dictatorial"; that is, it should not
reflect the values of any single individual. A minimal
requirement for protecting individual rights is that the rule
should respect the individual preferences of at least some people
in at least some dimension, for instance regarding their personal
sphere. Sen pointed to a fundamental dilemma by showing that no
collective decision rule can fulfill such a minimal requirement
on individual rights and the other axioms in Arrow's
impossibility theorem. This finding initiated an extensive
scientific discussion about the extent to which a collective
decision rule can be made consistent with a sphere of individual
rights.
Information about the welfare of
individuals
Traditionally, the theory of social choice had only assumed that
every individual can rank different alternatives, without
assuming anything about interpersonal comparability. This
assumption certainly avoided the difficult question of whether
the utility individuals attach to different alternatives can
really be compared. Unfortunately, it also precluded saying
anything worthwhile about inequality. Sen initiated an entirely
new field in the theory of social choice, by showing how
different assumptions regarding interpersonal comparability
affect the possibility of finding a consistent, non-dictatorial
rule for collective decisions. He also demonstrated the implicit
assumptions made when applying principles proposed by moral
philosophy to evaluate different alternatives for society. The
utilitarian principle, for instance, appeals to the sum of all
individuals' utility when evaluating a specific social state;
this assumes that differences in the utility of
alternative social states can be compared across individuals. The
principle formulated by the American philosopher John Rawls -
that the social state should be evaluated only with reference to
the individual who is worst off - assumes that the utility
level of each individual can be compared to the utility of
every other individual. Later developments in social choice rely,
to a large extent, on Sen's analysis of the information about,
and interpersonal comparability of, individual
utilities.
Indexes of Welfare and Poverty
In order to compare distributions of welfare in different
countries, or to study changes in the distribution within a given
country, some kind of index is required that measures differences
in welfare or income. The construction of such indexes is an
important application of the theory of social choice, in the
sense that inequality indexes are closely linked to welfare
functions representing the values of society. Serge Kolm, Anthony
Atkinson and - somewhat later - Amartya Sen were the first to
derive substantial results in this area. Around 1970, they
clarified the relation between the so-called Lorentz curve (that
describes the income distribution), the so-called Gini
coefficient (that measures the degree of income inequality), and
society's ordering of different income distributions. Sen has
later made valuable contributions by defining poverty indexes and
other welfare indicators.
Poverty indexes
A common measure of poverty in a society is the share of the
population, H , with incomes below a certain,
predetermined, poverty line. But the theoretical foundation for
this kind of measure was unclear. It also ignored the degree of
poverty among the poor; even a significant boost in the income of
the poorest groups in society does not affect H as long as
their incomes do not cross the poverty line. To remedy these
deficiencies, Sen postulated five reasonable axioms from which he
derived a poverty index:
Welfare indicators
A problem when comparing the welfare of different societies is
that many commonly used indicators, such as income per capita,
only take average conditions into account. Sen has developed
alternatives, which also encompass the income distribution. A
specific alternative - which, like the poverty index, he derived
from a number of axioms - is to use the measure
Sen has emphasized that what creates welfare is not goods as such, but the activity for which they are acquired. According to this view, income is significant because of the opportunities it creates. But the actual opportunities - or capabilities, as Sen calls them - also depend on a number of other factors, such as health; these factors should also be considered when measuring welfare. Alternative welfare indicators, such as the UN's Human Development Index, are constructed precisely in this spirit.
Amartya Sen has pointed out that all well-founded ethical principles presuppose equality among individuals in some respect. But as the ability to exploit equal opportunity varies across individuals, the distribution problem can never be fully solved; equality in some dimension necessarily implies inequality in others. In which dimension we advocate equality and in which dimensions we have to accept inequality obviously depends on how we evaluate the different dimensions of welfare. In analogy with his approach to welfare measurement, Sen maintains that capabilities of individuals constitute the principal dimension in which we should strive for equality. At the same time, he observes a problem with this ethical principle, namely that individuals make decisions which determine their capabilities at a later stage.
Welfare of the Poorest
In his very first articles Sen analyzed the choice of production
technology in developing countries. Indeed, almost all of Sen's
works deal with development economics, as they are often devoted
to the welfare of the poorest people in society. He has also
studied actual famines, in a way quite in line with his
theoretical approach to welfare measurement.
Analysis of famine
Sen's best-known work in this area is his book from 1981:
Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and
Deprivation. Here, he challenges the common view that a
shortage of food is the most important (sometimes the only)
explanation for famine. On the basis of a careful study of a
number of such catastrophes in India, Bangladesh, and Saharan
countries, from the 1940s onwards, he found other explanatory
factors. He argues that several observed phenomena cannot in fact
be explained by a shortage of food alone, e.g. that famines have
occurred even when the supply of food was not significantly lower
than during previous years (without famines), or that
faminestricken areas have sometimes exported food.
Sen shows that a profound understanding of famine requires a thorough analysis of how various social and economic factors influence different groups in society and determine their actual opportunities. For example, part of his explanation for the Bangladesh famine of 1974 is that flooding throughout the country that year significantly raised food prices, while work opportunities for agricultural workers declined drastically as one of the crops could not be harvested. Due to these factors, the real incomes of agricultural workers declined so much that this group was disproportionately stricken by starvation.
Later works by Sen (summarized in a book from 1989 with Jean Drèze) discuss - in a similar spirit - how to prevent famine, or how to limit the effects of famine once it has occurred. Even though a few critics have questioned the validity of some empirical results in Poverty and Famines, the book is undoubtedly a key contribution to development economics. With its emphasis on distributional issues and poverty, the book rhymes well with the common theme in Amartya Sen's research.
Further Reading
Additional background
material (pdf)
Sen, A.K., 1970, Collective Choice and Social Welfare, San
Fransisco: Holden Day, also London: Oliver and Boyd (reprinted
Amsterdam: North-Holland).
Sen, A.K. , 1973, On Economic Inequality, Oxford:
Clarendon Press.
Sen, A.K., 1981, Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement
and Deprivation, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
***
Amartya Sen was born in Bengal in 1933 (citizen of India). He received his doctorate from the University of Cambridge, U.K. in 1959 and has been professor in India, the U.K. and the U.S. In 1998 he left his professorships in economics and philosophy at Harvard University to become Master of Trinity College, Cambridge U.K.
Professor Amartya Sen
Trinity College
Cambridge, CB2 1TQ, U.K.