The Political Economy of Hunger
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Abstract
Sen’s essay concerns the existence of extensive hunger amidst unprecedented global prosperity in the contemporary world, but he argues that the problem would be decisively solvable if our response were no longer shaped by Malthusian pessimism. Effective famine prevention does not turn on food supply per head and the automatic mechanism of the market: there can be plenty of food while large sections of the population lack the means to obtain it. Effective famine prevention thus requires “entitlements.” Economically, governments can and should provide public employment programs so that those threatened by famine can be empowered to command food. Politically, democratic participation and a free press can work to…
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Keywords
- Famine
- Prosperity
- Government (linguistics)
- Population
- Free market
- Democracy
- Development economics
- Economics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Zero hunger
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