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1969 2012
Prize category:
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The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1998
Amartya Sen
The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1998
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Amartya Sen
Autobiography
I was born in a
University campus and seem to have lived all my life in one
campus or another. My family is from Dhaka - now the capital of
Bangladesh. My ancestral home in Wari in "old Dhaka" is not far
from the University campus in Ramna. My father Ashutosh Sen
taught chemistry at Dhaka University. I was, however, born in
Santiniketan, on the campus of Rabindranath Tagore's
Visva-Bharati (both a school and a college), where my maternal
grandfather (Kshiti Mohan Sen) used to teach Sanskrit as well as
ancient and medieval Indian culture, and where my mother (Amita
Sen), like me later, had been a student. After Santiniketan, I
studied at Presidency College in Calcutta and then at Trinity College
in Cambridge, and I have taught at universities in both these
cities, and also at Delhi University, the London School of
Economics, Oxford
University, and Harvard University, and on a visiting basis, at
M.I.T.,
Stanford,
Berkeley, and Cornell. I have not had any serious non-academic
job.
My planned field of study varied a good deal in my younger years,
and between the ages of three and seventeen, I seriously flirted,
in turn, with Sanskrit, mathematics, and physics, before settling
for the eccentric charms of economics. But the idea that I should
be a teacher and a researcher of some sort did not vary over the
years. I am used to thinking of the word "academic" as meaning
"sound," rather than the more old-fashioned dictionary meaning:
"unpractical," "theoretical," or "conjectural."
During three childhood years (between the ages of 3 and 6) I was
in Mandalay in Burma, where my father was a visiting professor.
But much of my childhood was, in fact, spent in Dhaka, and I
began my formal education there, at St. Gregory's School.
However, I soon moved to Santiniketan, and it was mainly in
Tagore's school that my educational attitudes were formed. This
was a co-educational school, with many progressive features. The
emphasis was on fostering curiosity rather than competitive
excellence, and any kind of interest in examination performance
and grades was severely discouraged. ("She is quite a serious
thinker," I remember one of my teachers telling me about a fellow
student, "even though her grades are very good.") Since I was, I
have to confess, a reasonably good student, I had to do my best
to efface that stigma.
The curriculum of the school did not neglect India's cultural,
analytical and scientific heritage, but was very involved also
with the rest of the world. Indeed, it was astonishingly open to
influences from all over the world, including the West, but also
other non-Western cultures, such as East and South-East Asia
(including China, Japan, Indonesia, Korea), West Asia, and
Africa. I remember being quite struck by Rabindranath Tagore's
approach to cultural diversity in the world (well reflected in
our curriculum), which he had expressed in a letter to a friend:
"Whatever we understand and enjoy in human products instantly
becomes ours, wherever they might have their origin... Let me
feel with unalloyed gladness that all the great glories of man
are mine."
Identity and violence
I loved that breadth, and also the fact that in interpreting
Indian civilization itself, its cultural diversity was much
emphasized. By pointing to the extensive heterogeneity in India's
cultural background and richly diverse history, Tagore argued
that the "idea of India" itself militated against a culturally
separatist view, "against the intense consciousness of the
separateness of one's own people from others." Tagore and his
school constantly resisted the narrowly communal identities of
Hindus or Muslims or others, and he was, I suppose, fortunate
that he died - in 1941 - just before the communal killings
fomented by sectarian politics engulfed India through much of the
1940s. Some of my own disturbing memories as I was entering my
teenage years in India in the mid-1940s relate to the massive
identity shift that followed divisive politics. People's
identities as Indians, as Asians, or as members of the human
race, seemed to give way - quite suddenly - to sectarian
identification with Hindu, Muslim, or Sikh communities. The
broadly Indian of January was rapidly and unquestioningly
transformed into the narrowly Hindu or finely Muslim of March.
The carnage that followed had much to do with unreasoned herd
behaviour by which people, as it were, "discovered" their new
divisive and belligerent identities, and failed to take note of
the diversity that makes Indian culture so powerfully mixed. The
same people were suddenly different.
I had to observe, as a young child, some of that mindless
violence. One afternoon in Dhaka, a man came through the gate
screaming pitifully and bleeding profusely. The wounded person,
who had been knifed on the back, was a Muslim daily labourer,
called Kader Mia. He had come for some work in a neighbouring
house - for a tiny reward - and had been knifed on the street by
some communal thugs in our largely Hindu area. As he was being
taken to the hospital by my father, he went on saying that his
wife had told him not to go into a hostile area during the
communal riots. But he had to go out in search of work and
earning because his family had nothing to eat. The penalty of
that economic unfreedom turned out to be death, which occurred
later on in the hospital. The experience was devastating for me,
and suddenly made me aware of the dangers of narrowly defined
identities, and also of the divisiveness that can lie buried in
communitarian politics. It also alerted me to the remarkable fact
that economic unfreedom, in the form of extreme poverty, can make
a person a helpless prey in the violation of other kinds of
freedom: Kader Mia need not have come to a hostile area in search
of income in those troubled times if his family could have
managed without it.
Calcutta and its debates
By the time I arrived in Calcutta to study at Presidency College,
I had a fairly formed attitude on cultural identity (including an
understanding of its inescapable plurality as well as the need
for unobstructed absorption rather than sectarian denial). I
still had to confront the competing loyalties of rival political
attitudes: for example, possible conflicts between substantive
equity, on the one hand, and universal tolerance, on the other,
which simultaneously appealed to me. On this more
presently.
The educational excellence of Presidency College was captivating.
My interest in economics was amply rewarded by quite outstanding
teaching. I was particularly influenced by the teaching of
Bhabatosh Datta and Tapas Majumdar, but there were other great
teachers as well, such as Dhiresh Bhattacharya. I also had the
great fortune of having wonderful classmates, particularly the
remarkable Sukhamoy Chakravarty (more on him presently), but also
many others, including Mrinal Datta Chaudhuri (who was also at
Santiniketan, earlier) and Jati Sengupta. I was close also to
several students of history, such as Barun De, Partha Gupta and
Benoy Chaudhuri. (Presidency College had a great school of
history as well, led by a most inspiring teacher in the form of
Sushobhan Sarkar.) My intellectual horizon was radically
broadened.
The student community of Presidency College was also politically
most active. Though I could not develop enough enthusiasm to join
any political party, the quality of sympathy and egalitarian
commitment of the "left" appealed to me greatly (as it did to
most of my fellow students as well, in that oddly elitist
college). The kind of rudimentary thinking that had got me
involved, while at Santiniketan, in running evening schools (for
illiterate rural children in the neighbouring villages) seemed
now to be badly in need of systematic political broadening and
social enlargement.
I was at Presidency College during 1951 to 1953. The memory of
the Bengal famine of 1943, in which between two and three million
people had died, and which I had watched from Santiniketan, was
still quite fresh in my mind. I had been struck by its thoroughly
class-dependent character. (I knew of no one in my school or
among my friends and relations whose family had experienced the
slightest problem during the entire famine; it was not a famine
that afflicted even the lower middle classes - only people much
further down the economic ladder, such as landless rural
labourers.) Calcutta itself, despite its immensely rich
intellectual and cultural life, provided many constant reminders
of the proximity of unbearable economic misery, and not even an
elite college could ignore its continuous and close
presence.
And yet, despite the high moral and ethical quality of social
commiseration, political dedication and a deep commitment to
equity, there was something rather disturbing about standard
leftwing politics of that time: in particular, its scepticism of
process-oriented political thinking, including democratic
procedures that permit pluralism. The major institutions of
democracy got no more credit than what could be portioned out to
what was seen as "bourgeois democracy," on the deficiencies of
which the critics were most vocal. The power of money in many
democratic practices was rightly identified, but the alternatives
- including the terrible abuses of non-oppositional politics -
did not receive serious critical scrutiny. There was also a
tendency to see political tolerance as a kind of "weakness of
will" that may deflect well-meaning leaders from promoting "the
social good," without let or hindrance.
Given my political conviction on the constructive role of
opposition and my commitment to general tolerance and pluralism,
there was a bit of a dilemma to be faced in coordinating those
beliefs with the form of left-wing activism that characterized
the mainstream of student politics in the-then Calcutta. What was
at stake, it seemed to me, in political toleration was not just
the liberal political arguments that had so clearly emerged in
post-Enlightenment Europe and America, but also the traditional
values of tolerance of plurality which had been championed over
the centuries in many different cultures - not least in India.
Indeed, as Ashoka had put it in the third century B.C.: "For he
who does reverence to his own sect while disparaging the sects of
others wholly from attachment to his own, with intent to enhance
the splendour of his own sect, in reality by such conduct
inflicts the severest injury on his own sect." To see political
tolerance merely as a "Western liberal" inclination seemed to me
to be a serious mistake.
Even though these issues were quite disturbing, they also forced
me to face some foundational disputes then and there, which I
might have otherwise neglected. Indeed, we were constantly
debating these competing political demands. As a matter of fact,
as I look back at the fields of academic work in which I have
felt most involved throughout my life (and which were
specifically cited by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in
making their award), they were already among the concerns that
were agitating me most in my undergraduate days in Calcutta.
These encompassed welfare economics, economic inequality and
poverty, on the one hand (including the most extreme
manifestation of poverty in the form of famines), and the scope
and possibility of rational, tolerant and democratic social
choice, on the other (including voting procedures and the
protection of liberty and minority rights). My involvement with
the fields of research identified in the Nobel statement had, in
fact, developed much before I managed to do any formal work in
these areas.
It was not long after Kenneth Arrow's
path-breaking study of social choice, Social Choice and
Individual Values, was published in New York in 1951, that my
brilliant co-student Sukhamoy Chakravarty drew my attention to
the book and to Arrow's stunning "impossibility theorem" (this
must have been in the early months of 1952). Sukhamoy too was
broadly attracted by the left, but also worried about political
authoritarianism, and we discussed the implications of Arrow's
demonstration that no non-dictatorial social choice mechanism may
yield consistent social decisions. Did it really give any excuse
for authoritarianism (of the left, or of the right)? I
particularly remember one long afternoon in the College Street
Coffee House, with Sukhamoy explaining his own reading of the
ramifications of the formal results, sitting next to a window,
with his deeply intelligent face glowing in the mild winter sun
of Calcutta (a haunting memory that would invade me again and
again when he died suddenly of a heart attack a few years
ago).
Cambridge as a battleground
In 1953, I moved from Calcutta to Cambridge, to study at Trinity
College. Though I had already obtained a B.A. from Calcutta
University (with economics major and mathematics minor),
Cambridge enroled me for another B.A. (in pure economics) to be
quickly done in two years (this was fair enough since I was still
in my late teens when I arrived at Cambridge). The style of
economics at the-then Cambridge was much less mathematical than
in Calcutta. Also, it was generally less concerned with some of
the foundational issues that had agitated me earlier. I had,
however, some wonderful fellow students (including Samuel
Brittan, Mahbub ul Haq, Rehman Sobhan, Michael Nicholson, Lal
Jayawardena, Luigi Pasinetti, Pierangelo Garegnani, Charles
Feinstein, among others) who were quite involved with
foundational assessment of the ends and means of economics as a
discipline.
However, the major debates in political economy in Cambridge were
rather firmly geared to the pros and cons of Keynesian economics
and the diverse contributions of Keynes's followers at Cambridge
(Richard Kahn, Nicholas Kaldor, Joan Robinson, among them), on
the one hand, and of "neo-classical" economists sceptical of
Keynes, on the other (including, in different ways, Dennis
Robertson, Harry Johnson, Peter Bauer, Michael Farrell, among
others). I was lucky to have close relations with economists on
both sides of the divide. The debates centred on macroeconomics
dealing with economic aggregates for the economy as a whole, but
later moved to capital theory, with the neo-Keynesians dead set
against any use of "aggregate capital" in economic modelling
(some of my fellow students, including Pasinetti and Garegnani,
made substantial contributions to this debate).
Even though there were a number of fine teachers who did not get
very involved in these intense fights between different schools
of thought (such as Richard Stone, Brian Reddaway, Robin
Matthews, Kenneth Berrill, Aubrey Silberston, Robin Marris), the
political lines were, in general, very firmly - and rather
bizarrely - drawn. In an obvious sense, the Keynesians were to
the "left" of the neo-classicists, but this was very much in the
spirit of "this far but no further". Also, there was no way in
which the different economists could be nicely ordered in just
one dimension. Maurice Dobb, who was an astute Marxist economist,
was often thought by Keynesians and neo-Keynesians to be "quite
soft" on "neo-classical" economics. He was one of the few who, to
my delight, took welfare economics seriously (and indeed taught a
regular course on it), just as the intensely "neo-classical" A.C.
Pigou had done (while continuing to debate Keynes in
macroeconomics). Not surprisingly, when the Marxist Dobb defeated
Kaldor in an election to the Faculty Board, Kaldor declared it to
be a victory of the perfidious neo-classical economics in
disguise ("marginal utility theory has won," Kaldor told Sraffa
that evening, in commenting on the electoral success of a Marxist
economist!)
However, Kaldor was, in fact, much the most tolerant of the
neo-Keynesians at Cambridge. If Richard Kahn was in general the
most bellicose, the stern reproach that I received often for not
being quite true to the new orthodoxy of neo-Keynesianism came
mostly from my thesis supervisor - the totally brilliant but
vigorously intolerant Joan Robinson.
In this desert of constant feuding, my own college, Trinity, was
a bit of an oasis. I suppose I was lucky to be there, but it was
not entirely luck, since I had chosen to apply to Trinity after
noticing, in the handbook of Cambridge University, that three
remarkable economists of very different political views
coexisted there. The Marxist Maurice Dobb and the conservative
neo-classicist Dennis Robertson did joint seminars, and Trinity
also had Piero Sraffa, a model of scepticism of nearly all the
standard schools of thought. I had the good fortune of working
with all of them and learning greatly from each.
The peaceful - indeed warm - co-existence of Dobb, Robertson and
Sraffa was quite remarkable, given the feuding in the rest of the
University. Sraffa told me, later on, a nice anecdote about
Dobb's joining of Trinity, on the invitation of Robertson. When
asked by Robertson whether he would like to teach at Trinity,
Dobb said yes enthusiastically, but he suffered later from a deep
sense of guilt in not having given Robertson "the full facts. "
So he wrote a letter to Robertson apologizing for not having
mentioned earlier that he was a member of the Communist Party,
supplemented by the statement - I think a rather "English"
statement - that he would understand perfectly if in view of that
Robertson were to decide that he, Dobb, was not a fit person to
teach Trinity undergraduates. Robertson wrote a one-sentence
reply: "Dear Dobb, so long as you give us a fortnight's notice
before blowing up the Chapel, it will be all right."
So there did exist, to some extent, a nice "practice" of
democratic and tolerant social choice at Trinity, my own college.
But I fear I could not get anyone in Trinity, or in Cambridge,
very excited in the "theory" of social choice. I had to choose
quite a different subject for my research thesis, after
completing my B.A. The thesis was on "the choice of techniques,"
which interested Joan Robinson as well as Maurice Dobb.
Philosophy and economics
At the end of the first year of research, I was bumptious enough
to think that I had some results that would make a thesis, and so
I applied to go to India on a two-years leave from Cambridge,
since I could not - given the regulation then in force - submit
my Ph.D. thesis for a degree until I had been registered for
research for three years. I was excitedly impatient in wanting to
find out what was going on back at home, and when leave was
granted to me, I flew off immediately to Calcutta. Cambridge
University insisted on my having a "supervisor" in India, and I
had the good fortune of having the great economic methodologist,
A.K. Dasgupta, who was then teaching in Benares. With him I had
frequent - and always enlightening - conversations on everything
under the sun (occasionally on my thesis as well).
In Calcutta, I was also appointed to a chair in economics at the
newly created Jadavpur University, where I was asked to set up a
new department of economics. Since I was not yet even 23, this
caused a predictable - and entirely understandable - storm of
protest. But I enjoyed the opportunity and the challenge (even
though several graffitis on the University walls displayed the
"new professor" as having been just snatched from the cradle).
Jadavpur was quite an exciting place intellectually (my
colleagues included Paramesh Ray, Mrinal Datta Chaudhuri, Anita
Banerji, Ajit Dasgupta, and others in the economics department).
The University also had, among other luminaries, the immensely
innovative historian, Ranajit Guha, who later initiated the
"subaltern studies" - a highly influential school of colonial and
post-colonial history. I particularly enjoyed getting back to
some of the foundational issues that I had to neglect somewhat at
Cambridge.
While my thesis was quietly "maturing" with the mere passage of
time (to be worthy of the 3-year rule), I took the liberty of
submitting it for a competitive Prize Fellowship at Trinity
College. Since, luckily, I also got elected, I then had to choose
between continuing in Calcutta and going back to Cambridge. I
split the time, and returned to Cambridge somewhat earlier than I
had planned. The Prize Fellowship gave me four years of freedom
to do anything I liked (no questions asked), and I took the
radical decision of studying philosophy in that period. I had
always been interested in logic and in epistemology, but soon got
involved in moral and political philosophy as well (they related
closely to my older concerns about democracy and equity).
The broadening of my studies into philosophy was important for me
not just because some of my main areas of interest in economics
relate quite closely to philosophical disciplines (for example,
social choice theory makes intense use of mathematical logic and
also draws on moral philosophy, and so does the study of
inequality and deprivation), but also because I found
philosophical studies very rewarding on their own. Indeed, I went
on to write a number of papers in philosophy, particularly in
epistemology, ethics and political philosophy. While I am
interested both in economics and in philosophy, the union of my
interests in the two fields far exceeds their intersection. When,
many years later, I had the privilege of working with some major
philosophers (such as John Rawls, Isaiah Berlin, Bernard
Williams, Ronald Dworkin, Derek Parfit, Thomas Scanlon, Robert
Nozick, and others), I felt very grateful to Trinity for having
given me the opportunity as well as the courage to get into
exacting philosophy.
Delhi School of Economics
During 1960-61, I visited M.I.T., on leave from Trinity College,
and found it a great relief to get away from the rather sterile
debates that the contending armies were fighting in Cambridge. I
benefited greatly from many conversations with Paul Samuelson,
Robert Solow,
Franco
Modigliani, Norbert Wiener, and others that made M.I.T such
an inspiring place. A summer visit to Stanford added to my sense
of breadth of economics as a subject. In 1963, I decided to leave
Cambridge altogether, and went to Delhi, as Professor of
Economics at the Delhi School of Economics and at the University
of Delhi. I taught in Delhi until 1971. In many ways this was the
most intellectually challenging period of my academic life. Under
the leadership of K.N. Raj, a remarkable applied economist who
was already in Delhi, we made an attempt to build an advanced
school of economics there. The Delhi School was already a good
centre for economic study (drawing on the work of V.K.R.V. Rao,
B.N. Ganguli, P.N. Dhar, Khaleq Naqvi, Dharm Narain, and many
others, in addition to Raj), and a number of new economists
joined, including Sukhamoy Chakravarty, Jagdish Bhagwati, A.L.
Nagar, Manmohan Singh, Mrinal Datta Chaudhuri, Dharma Kumar, Raj
Krishna, Ajit Biswas, K.L. Krishna, Suresh Tendulkar, and others.
(Delhi School of Economics also had some leading social
anthropologists, such as M.N. Srinivas, Andre Beteille, Baviskar,
Veena Das, and major historians such as Tapan Ray Chaudhuri,
whose work enriched the social sciences in general.) By the time
I left Delhi in 1971 to join the London School of Economics, we
had jointly succeeded in making the Delhi School the pre-eminent
centre of education in economics and the social sciences, in
India.
Regarding research, I plunged myself full steam into social
choice theory in the dynamic intellectual atmosphere of Delhi
University. My interest in the subject was consolidated during a
one-year visit to Berkeley in 1964-65, where I not only had the
chance to study and teach some social choice theory, but also had
the unique opportunity of observing some practical social choice
in the form of student activism in the "free speech movement." An
initial difficulty in pursuing social choice at the Delhi School
was that while I had the freedom to do what I liked, I did not,
at first, have anyone who was interested in the subject as a
formal discipline. The solution, of course, was to have students
take an interest in the subject. This happened with a bang with
the arrival of a brilliant student, Prasanta Pattanaik, who did a
splendid thesis on voting theory, and later on, also did joint
work with me (adding substantially to the reach of what I was
trying to do). Gradually, a sizeable and technically excellent
group of economists interested in social choice theory emerged at
the Delhi School.
Social choice theory related importantly to a more widespread
interest in aggregation in economic assessment and policy making
(related to poverty, inequality, unemployment, real national
income, living standards). There was a great reason for
satisfaction in the fact that a number of leading social choice
theorists (in addition to Prasanta Pattanaik) emanated from the
Delhi School, including Kaushik Basu and Rajat Deb (who also
studied with me at the London School of Economics after I moved
there), and Bhaskar Dutta and Manimay Sengupta, among others.
There were other students who were primarily working in other
areas (this applies to Basu as well), but whose work and
interests were influenced by the strong current of social choice
theory at the Delhi School (Nanak Kakwani is a good example of
this).
In my book, Collective Choice and Social Welfare,
published in 1970, I made an effort to take on overall view of
social choice theory. There were a number of analytical findings
to report, but despite the presence of many "trees" (in the form
of particular technical results), I could not help looking
anxiously for the forest. I had to come back again to the old
general question that had moved me so much in my teenage years at
Presidency College: Is reasonable social choice at all possible
given the differences between one person's preferences (including
interests and judgments) and another's (indeed, as Horace noted a
long time ago, there may be "as many preferences as there are
people")?
The work underlying Collective Choice and Social Welfare
was mostly completed in Delhi, but I was much helped in giving it
a final shape by a joint course on "social justice" I taught at
Harvard with Kenneth Arrow and John Rawls, both of whom were
wonderfully helpful in giving me their assessments and
suggestions. The joint course was, in fact, quite a success both
in getting many important issues discussed, and also in involving
a remarkable circle of participants (who were sitting in as
"auditors"), drawn from the established economists and
philosophers in the Harvard region. (It was also quite well-known
outside the campus: I was asked by a neighbour in a plane journey
to San Francisco whether, as a teacher at Harvard, I had heard of
an "apparently interesting" course taught by "Kenneth Arrow, John
Rawls, and some unknown guy.")
There was another course I taught jointly, with Stephen Marglin
and Prasanta Pattanaik (who too had come to Harvard), which was
concerned with development as well as Policy making. This nicely
supplemented my involvements in pure social choice theory (in
fact, Marglin and Pattanaik were both very interested in
examining the connection between social choice theory and other
areas in economics).
From Delhi to London and Oxford
I left Delhi, in 1971, shortly after Collective Choice and
Social Welfare was published in 1970. My wife, Nabaneeta Dev,
with whom I have two children (Antara and Nandana), had constant
trouble with her health in Delhi (mainly from asthma). London
might have suited her better, but, as it happens, the marriage
broke up shortly after we went to London.
Nabaneeta is a remarkably successful poet, literary critic and
writer of novels and short stories (one of the most celebrated
authors in contemporary Bengali literature), which she has
combined, since our divorce, with being a University Professor at
Jadavpur University in Calcutta. I learned many things from her,
including the appreciation of poetry from an "internal"
perspective. She had worked earlier on the distinctive style and
composition of epic poetry, including the Sanskrit epics
(particularly the Ramayana), and this I had got very
involved in. Nabaneeta's parents were very well-known poets as
well, and she seems to have borne her celebrity status - and the
great many recognitions that have come her way - with unaffected
approachability and warmth. She had visits from an unending
stream of literary fans, and I understand, still does. (On one
occasion, arrived a poet with a hundred new poems, with the
declared intention of reading them aloud to her, to get her
critical judgement, but since she was out, he said that he would
instead settle for reading them to me. When I pleaded that I
lacked literary sophistication, I was assured by the determined
poet: "That is just right; I would like to know how the common
man may react to my poetry." The common man, I am proud to say,
reacted with appropriate dignity and self-control.)
When we moved to London, I was also going through some serious
medical problems. In early 1952, at the age of 18 (when I was an
undergraduate at Presidency College), I had cancer of the mouth,
and it had been dealt with by a severe dose of radiation in a
rather primitive Calcutta hospital. This was only seven years
after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the long-run effects of
radiation were not much understood. The dose of radiation I got
may have cured the cancer, but it also killed the bones in my
hard palate. By 1971, it appeared that I had either a recurrence
of the cancer, or a severe case of bone necrosis. The first thing
I had to do on returning to England was to have a serious
operation, without knowing whether it would be merely plastic
surgery to compensate for the necrosis (a long and complicated
operation in the mouth, but no real threat to survival), or much
more demandingly, a fresh round of efforts at cancer
eradication.
After the long operation (it had lasted nearly seven hours) when
I woke up from the heavy anaesthesia, it was four o'clock in the
morning. As a person with much impatience, I wanted to know what
the surgeon had found. The nurse on duty said she was not allowed
to tell me anything: "You must wait for the doctors to come at
nine." This created some tension (I wanted to know what had
emerged), which the nurse noticed. I could see that she was
itching to tell me something: indeed (as I would know later) to
tell me that no recurrence of cancer had been detected in the
frozen-section biopsy that had been performed, and that the long
operation was mainly one of reconstruction of the palate to
compensate for the necrosis. She ultimately gave in, and chose an
interesting form of communication, which I found quite striking
(as well as kind). "You know," she said, "they were
praising you very much!" It then dawned on me that not
having cancer can be a subject for praise. Indeed lulled by
praise, I went quietly back to my post-operative sleep. In later
years, when I would try to work on judging the goodness of a
society by the quality of health of the people, her endorsement
of my praiseworthiness for being cancer-free would serve as a
good reference point!
The intellectual atmosphere at the LSE in particular and in
London in general was most gratifying, with a dazzling array of
historians, economists, sociologists and others. It was wonderful
to have the opportunity of seeing Eric Hobsbawm (the great
historian) and his wife Marlene very frequently and to interact
regularly with Frank and Dorothy Hahn, Terence and Dorinda
Gorman, and many others. Our small neighbourhood in London
(Bartholomew estate, within the Kentish Town) itself offered
wonderful company of intellectual and artistic creativity and
political involvement. Even after I took an Oxford job (Professor
of Economics, 1977-80, Drummond Professor of Political Economy,
1980-87) later on, I could not be budged from living in
London.
As I settled down at the London School of Economics in 1971, I
resumed my work on social choice theory. Again, I had excellent
students at LSE, and later on at Oxford. In addition to Kaushik
Basu and Rajat Deb (who had come from Dehli), other students such
as Siddiq Osmani, Ben Fine, Ravi Kanbur, Carl Hamilton, John
Wriglesworth, David Kelsey, Yasumi Matsumoto, Jonathan Riley,
produced distinguished Ph.D. theses on a variety of economic and
social choice problems. It made me very proud that many of the
results that became standard in social choice theory and welfare
economics had first emerged in these Ph.D. theses.
I was also fortunate to have colleagues who were working on
serious social choice problems, including Peter Hammond, Charles
Blackorby, Kotaro Suzumura, Geoffrey Heal, Gracieda Chichilnisky,
Ken Binmore, Wulf Gaertner, Eric Maskin, John Muellbauer, Kevin
Roberts, Susan Hurley, at LSE or Oxford, or neighbouring British
universities. (I also learned greatly from conversations with
economists who were in other fields, but whose works were of
great interest to me, including Sudhir Anand, Tony Atkinson,
Christopher Bliss, Meghnad Desai, Terence Gorman, Frank Hahn,
David Hendry, Richard Layard, James Mirrlees, John
Muellbauer, Steve Nickel, among others.) I also had the
opportunity of collaboration with social choice theorists
elsewhere, such as Claude d'Aspremont and Louis Gevers in
Belgium, Koichi Hamada and Ken-ichi Inada in Japan (joined later
by Suzumura when he returned there), and many others in America,
Canada, Israel, Australia, Russia, and elsewhere). There were
many new formal results and informal understandings that emerged
in these works, and the gloom of "impossibility results" ceased
to be the only prominent theme in the field. The 1970s were
probably the golden years of social choice theory across the
world. Personally, I had the sense of having a ball.
From social choice to inequality and poverty
The constructive possibilities that the new literature on social
choice produced directed us immediately to making use of
available statistics for a variety of economic and social
appraisals: measuring economic inequality, judging poverty,
evaluating projects, analyzing unemployment, investigating the
principles and implications of liberty and rights, assessing
gender inequality, and so on. My work on inequality was much
inspired and stimulated by that of Tony Atkinson. I also worked
for a while with Partha Dasgupta and David Starrett on measuring
inequality (after having worked with Dasgupta and Stephen Marglin
on project evaluation), and later, more extensively, with Sudhir
Anand and James Foster.
My own interests gradually shifted from the pure theory of social
choice to more "practical" problems. But I could not have taken
them on without having some confidence that the practical
exercises to be undertaken were also foundationally secure
(rather than implicitly harbouring incongruities and
impossibilities that could be exposed on deeper analytical
probing). The progress of the pure theory of social choice with
an expanded informational base was, in this sense, quite crucial
for my applied work as well.
In the reorientation of my research, I benefited greatly from
discussions with my wife, Eva Colorni, with whom I lived from
1973 onwards. Her critical standards were extremely exacting, but
she also wanted to encourage me to work on issues of practical
moment. Her personal background involved a fine mixture of theory
and practice, with an Italian Jewish father (Eugenio Colorni was
an academic philosopher and a hero of the Italian resistance who
was killed by the fascists in Rome shortly before the Americans
got there), a Berlinite Jewish mother (Ursula Hirschman was
herself a writer and the brother of the great development
economist, Albert Hirschman), and a stepfather who as a statesman
had been a prime mover in uniting Europe (Altiero Spinelli was
the founder of the "European Federalist movement," wrote its
"Manifesto" from prison in 1941, and officially established the
new movement, in the company of Eugenio Colorni, in Milan in
1943). Eva herself had studied law, philosophy and economics (in
Pavia and in Delhi), and lectured at the City of London
Polytechnic (now London Guildhall University). She was deeply
humane (with a great passion for social justice) as well as
fiercely rational (taking no theory for granted, subjecting each
to reasoned assessment and scrutiny). She exercised a great
influence on the standards and reach that I attempted to achieve
in my work (often without adequate success).
Eva was very supportive of my attempt to use a broadened
framework of social choice theory in a variety of applied
problems: to assess poverty; to evaluate inequality; to clarify
the nature of relative deprivation; to develop
distribution-adjusted national income measures; to clarify the
penalty of unemployment; to analyze violations of personal
liberties and basic rights; and to characterize gender
disparities and women's relative disadvantage. The results were
mostly published in journals in the 1970s and early 1980s, but
gathered together in two collections of articles (Choice,
Welfare and Measurement and Resources, Values and
Development, published, respectively, in 1982 and
1984).
The work on gender inequality was initially confined to analyzing
available statistics on the male-female differential in India (I
had a joint paper with Jocelyn Kynch on "Indian Women: Well-being
and Survival" in 1982), but gradually moved to international
comparisons (Commodities and Capabilities, 1985) and also
to some general theory ("Gender and Cooperative Conflict," 1990).
The theory drew both on empirical analysis of published
statistics across the world, but also of data I freshly collected
in India in the spring of 1983, in collaboration with Sunil
Sengupta, comparing boys and girls from birth to age 5. (We
weighed and studied every child in two largish villages in West
Bengal; I developed some expertise in weighing protesting
children, and felt quite proud of my accomplishment when, one
day, my research assistant phoned me with a request to take over
from her the job of weighing a child "who bites every hand within
the reach of her teeth." I developed some vanity in being able to
meet the challenge at the "biting end" of social choice
research.)
Poverty, famines and deprivation
From the mid-1970s, I also started work on the causation and
prevention of famines. This was initially done for the World
Employment Programme of the International Labour
Organization, for which my 1981 book Poverty and
Famines was written. (Louis Emmerij who led the programme
took much personal interest in the work I was trying to do on
famines.) I attempted to see famines as broad "economic" problems
(concentrating on how people can buy food, or otherwise get
entitled to it), rather than in terms of the grossly
undifferentiated picture of aggregate food supply for the economy
as a whole. The work was carried on later (from the middle of
1980s) under the auspices of the World Institute of Development
Economics Research (WIDER) in Helsinki, which was imaginatively
directed by Lal Jayawardena (an old friend who, as I noted
earlier, had also been a contemporary of mine at Cambridge in the
1950s). Siddiq Osmani, my ex-student, ably led the programme on
hunger and deprivation at WIDER. I also worked closely with
Martha Nussbaum on the cultural side of the programme, during
1987-89.
By the mid-1980s, I was collaborating extensively with Jean
Drèze, a young Belgian economist of extraordinary skill and
remarkable dedication. My understanding of hunger and deprivation
owes a great deal to his insights and investigations, and so does
my recent work on development, which has been mostly done jointly
with him. Indeed, my collaboration with Jean has been extremely
fruitful for me, not only because I have learned so much from
his, imaginative initiatives and insistent thoroughness, but also
because it is hard to beat an arrangement for joint work whereby
Jean does most of the work whereas I get a lot of the
credit.
While these were intensely practical matters, I also got more and
more involved in trying to understand the nature of individual
advantage in terms of the substantive freedoms that different
persons respectively enjoy, in the form of the capability to
achieve valuable things. If my work in social choice theory was
initially motivated by a desire to overcome Arrow's pessimistic
picture by going beyond his limited informational base, my work
on social justice based on individual freedoms and capabilities
was similarly motivated by an aspiration to learn from, but go
beyond, John Rawls's elegant theory of justice, through a broader
use of available information. My intellectual life has been much
influenced by the contributions as well as the wonderful
helpfulness of both Arrow and Rawls.
Harvard and beyond
In the late 1980s, I had reason to move again from where I was.
My wife, Eva, developed a difficult kind of cancer (of the
stomach), and died quite suddenly in 1985. We had young children
(Indrani and Kabir - then 10 and 8 respectively), and I wanted to
take them away to another country, where they would not miss
their mother constantly. The liveliness of America appealed to us
as an alternative location, and I took the children with me to
"taste" the prospects in the American universities that made me
an offer.
Indrani and Kabir rapidly became familiar with several campuses
(Stanford, Berkeley, Yale, Princeton, Harvard, UCLA, University of Texas
at Austin, among them), even though their knowledge of America
outside academia remained rather limited. (They particularly
enjoyed visiting their grand uncle and aunt, Albert and Sarah
Hirschman, at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton; as a
Trustee of the Institute, visits to Princeton were also very
pleasurable occasions for me.) I guess I was, to some extent,
imposing my preference for the academic climate on the children,
by confining the choice to universities only, but I did not
really know what else to do. However, I must confess that I
worried a little when I overheard my son Kabir, then nine years
old, responding to a friendly American's question during a plane
journey as to whether he knew Washington, D.C.. "Is that city," I
heard Kabir say, "closer to Palo Alto or to New Haven?"
We jointly chose Harvard, and it worked out extremely well. My
colleagues in economics and philosophy were just superb, some of
whom I knew well from earlier on (including John Rawls and Tim
Scanlon in philosophy, and Zvi Griliches, Dale Jorgenson, Janos
Kornai, Stephen Marglin in economics), but there were also others
whom I came to know after arriving at Harvard. I greatly enjoyed
teaching regular joint courses with Robert Nozick and Eric
Maskin, and also on occasions, with John Rawls and Thomas Scanlon
(in philosophy) and with Jerry Green, Stephen Marglin and David
Bloom (in economics). I could learn also from academics in many
other fields as well, not least at the Society of Fellows where I
served as a Senior Fellow for nearly a decade. Also, I was again
blessed with wonderful students in economics, philosophy, public
health and government, who did excellent theses, including
Andreas Papandreou (who moved with me from Oxford to Harvard, and
did a major book on externality and the environment), Tony Laden
(who, among many other things, clarified the game-theoretic
structure of Rawlsian theory of justice), Stephan Klasen (whose
work on gender inequality in survival is possibly the most
definitive work in this area), Felicia Knaul (who worked on
street children and the economic and social challenges they
face), Jennifer Ruger (who substantially advance the
understanding of health as a public policy concern), and indeed
many others with whom I greatly enjoyed working.
The social choice problems that had bothered me earlier on were
by now more analyzed and understood, and I did have, I thought,
some understanding of the demands of fairness, liberty and
equality. To get firmer understanding of all this, it was
necessary to pursue further the search for an adequate
characterization of individual advantage. This had been the
subject of my Tanner Lectures on Human Values at Stanford in 1979
(published as a paper, "Equality of What?" in 1980) and in a more
empirical form, in a second set of Tanner Lectures at Cambridge
in 1985 (published in 1987 as a volume of essays, edited by
Geoffrey Hawthorne, with contributions by Bernard Williams, Ravi
Kanbur, John Muellbauer, and Keith Hart). The approach explored
sees individual advantage not merely as opulence or utility, but
primarily in terms of the lives people manage to live and the
freedom they have to choose the kind of life they have reason to
value. The basic idea here is to pay attention to the actual
"capabilities" that people end up having. The capabilities depend
both on our physical and mental characteristics as well as on
social opportunities and influences (and can thus serve as the
basis not only of assessment of personal advantage but also of
efficiency and equity of social policies). I was trying to
explore this approach since my Tanner Lectures in 1979; there was
a reasonably ambitious attempt at linking theory to empirical
exercises in my book Commodities and Capabilities,
published in 1985. In my first few years at Harvard, I was much
concerned with developing this perspective further.
The idea of capabilities has strong Aristotelian connections,
which I came to understand more fully with the help of Martha
Nussbaum, a scholar with a remarkably extensive command over
classical philosophy as well as contemporary ethics and literary
studies. I learned a great deal from her, and we also
collaborated in a number of studies during 1987-89, including in
a collection of essays that pursued this approach in terms of
philosophical as well as economic reasoning (Quality of
Life was published in 1993, but the essays were from a
conference at WIDER in Helsinki in 1988).
During my Harvard years up to about 1991, I was much involved in
analyzing the overall implications of this perspective on welfare
economics and political philosophy (this is reported in my book,
Inequality Reexamined, published in 1992). But it was also
very nice to get involved in some new problems, including the
characterization of rationality, the demands of objectivity, and
the relation between facts and values. I used the old technique
of offering courses on them (sometimes jointly with Robert
Nozick) and through that learning as much as I taught. I started
taking an interest also in health equity (and in public health in
particular, in close collaboration with Sudhir Anand), a
challenging field of application for concepts of equity and
justice. Harvard's ample strength in an immense variety of
subjects gives one scope for much freedom in the choice of work
and of colleagues to talk to, and the high quality of the
students was a total delight as well. My work on inequality in
terms of variables other than incomes was also helped by the
collaboration of Angus Deaton and James Foster.
It was during my early years at Harvard that my old friend,
Mahbub ul Haq, who had been a fellow student at Cambridge (and
along with his wife, Bani, a very old and close friend), returned
back into my life in a big way. Mahbub's professional life had
taken him from Cambridge to Yale, then back to his native
Pakistan, with intermediate years at the World Bank. In 1989 he
was put in charge, by the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP), of the newly planned "Human Development Reports." Mahbub
insisted that I work with him to help develop a broader
informational approach to the assessment of development. This I
did with great delight, partly because of the exciting nature of
the work, but also because of the opportunity of working closely
with such an old and wonderful friend. Human Development Reports
seem to have received a good deal of attention in international
circles, and Mahbub was very successful in broadening the
informational basis of the assessment of development. His sudden
death in 1998 has robbed the world of one of the leading
practical reasoners in the world of contemporary economics.
India and Bangladesh
What about India? While I have worked abroad since 1971, I have
constantly retained close connections with Indian universities, I
have, of course, a special relation with Delhi University, where
I have been an honorary professor since leaving my full-time job
there in 1971, and I use this excuse to subject Delhi students to
lectures whenever I get a chance. For various reasons - personal
as well as academic - the peripatetic life seems to suit me, in
this respect. After my student days in Cambridge in 1953-56, I
guess I have never been away from India for more than six months
at a time. This - combined with my remaining exclusively an
Indian citizen - gives me, I think, some entitlement to speak on
Indian public affairs, and this remains a constant
involvement.
It is also very engaging - and a delight - to go back to
Bangladesh as often as I can, which is not only my old home, but
also where some of my closest friends and collaborators live and
work. This includes Rehman Sobhan to whom I have been very close
from my student days (he remains as sceptical of formal economics
and its reach as he was in the early 1950s), and also Anisur
Rehman (who is even more sceptical), Kamal Hossain, Jamal Islam,
Mushairaf Hussain, among many others, who are all in
Bangladesh.
When the Nobel award came my way, it also gave me an opportunity
to do something immediate and practical about my old obsessions,
including literacy, basic health care and gender equity, aimed
specifically at India and Bangladesh. The Pratichi Trust, which I
have set up with the help of some of the prize money, is, of
course, a small effort compared with the magnitude of these
problems. But it is nice to re-experience something of the old
excitement of running evening schools, more than fifty years ago,
in villages near Santiniketan.
From campus to campus
As far as my principal location is concerned, now that my
children have grown up, I could seize the opportunity to move
back to my old Cambridge college, Trinity. I accepted the offer
of becoming Master of the College from January 1998 (though I
have not cut my connections with Harvard altogether). The
reasoning was not independent of the fact that Trinity is not
only my old college where my academic life really began, but it
also happens to be next door to King's, where my wife, Emma
Rothschild, is a Fellow, and Director of the Centre for History
and Economics. Her forthcoming book on Adam Smith also takes on
the hard task of reinterpreting the European Enlightenment. It so
happens that one principal character in this study is Condorcet,
who was also one of the originators of social choice theory,
which is very pleasing (and rather useful as well).
Emma too is a convinced academic (a historian and an economist),
and both her parents had long connections with Cambridge and with
the University. Between my four children, and the two of us, the
universities that the Sen family has encountered include Calcutta
University, Cambridge University, Jadavpur University, Delhi
University, L.S.E., Oxford University, Harvard University,
M.I.T., University of California at Berkeley, Stanford
University, Cornell University, Smith College,
Wesleyan
University, among others. Perhaps one day we can jointly
write an illustrated guide to the universities.
I end this essay where I began - at a university campus. It is
not quite the same at 65 as it was at 5. But it is not so bad
even at an older age (especially, as Maurice Chevalier has
observed, "considering the alternative" ). Nor are university
campuses quite as far removed from life as is often presumed.
Robert Goheen has remarked, "if you feel that you have both feet
planted on level ground, then the university has failed you."
Right on. But then who wants to be planted on ground? There are
places to go.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1998, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1999
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate.
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1998
MLA style: "Amartya Sen - Autobiography". Nobelprize.org. 22 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/1998/sen-autobio.html
