HUNGER IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD
by
Amartya Sen
Lamont University Professor, and
Professor of Economics and Philosophy, Harvard University,
and Honorary Fellow, London School of Economics and Political Science
The Suntory Centre
Suntory and Toyota International Centres for
Economics and Related Disciplines
London School of Economics and Political Science
Discussion Paper
Houghton Street
DEDPS/8
London
WC2A
2AE
November 1997
Tel.: 020-7955 6674
NB: This PDF was retrospectively created in June 2002 of the paper originally
published in November 1997 as DERP No.8.
Abstract
Economic analysis of hunger calls for an informationally broad approach that
takes adequate account of the distinct interdependences involved. This paper
examines the interdependences between (1) income and food consumption,
(2) operations of different economic factors, (3) production and trade in
different countries, (4) macroeconomic stability and food security, (5)
intrafamily distributional rules and the sharing of food and health care, (6)
women's power and fertility behaviour, (7) military expenditure and economic
deprivation, (8) early undernourishment and its consequences on health and
skills, (9) political incentives and the direction of government policy, and (10)
public activism and social commitment. The implications of these
interconnections are briefly discussed.
Keywords: Hunger, food, undernourishment, entitlement, women's
empowerment, intrafamily distribution, fertility, political incentives, military
expenditure.
©
by Amartya Sen. All rights reserved. Short sections of text, not to exceed
two paragraphs, may be quoted without explicit permission provided that full
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