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To: ratan lal who wrote (3029)10/14/1998 9:28:00 AM
From: JPR  Respond to of 12475
 
Ratan:
The CNBC interview was around 9.30AM soon after I posted. He was talking about the common denominator for famine, namely undemocratic political system . He added that he never saw famine in a democracy, because the party in power during famine gets unseated and the opposition parties and the free press discuss the famine. Sometimes famine occur in the midst of plenty, which is available only to the rich and there is no buying or credit power for the poor and the deprived.
JPR



To: ratan lal who wrote (3029)10/14/1998 11:18:00 AM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 
Nobel Price for Economics,news-More on Prof.Amartya Sen and his work from Sweden.

Ratan:

Here is more information on Prof.Amartya Sen and his work right from
Nobel's web-site in Sweden.

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.


nobel.se



To: ratan lal who wrote (3029)10/16/1998 6:37:00 AM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 
Interview: PBS Interviews Nobel laureate Prof.Amartya Sen of Cambridge.

Ratan:

Good morning:

I happened to watch Prof.Sen last night on News Hour (PBS),did you'll see it. Here is the transcprit.
========================================

THE ECONOMICS OF POVERTY

October 15, 1998

Cambridge Professor Amartya Sen was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics for his work on welfare economics and the causes of famine. He discusses the economics of poverty with Phil Ponce.
...........

PHIL PONCE: Professor, one of the specific issues that the Nobel citation talks about is your interest in understanding famine, and it says that your best-known work has to do with understanding that famine isn't just caused by a shortage of food but by other things like unemployment, drop in income. Why the specific interest in famine?

AMARTYA SEN: Well, there are many reasons, of course, because famines are unfortunately still a real phenomenon in the world. And lots of people die from it, systematically, in different parts of the world, but in my case the personal interest arose also from the fact that I happen to observe from inside a major famine of the 20th century - the Bengal famine, which occurred in Indian in 1943 - in fact, the last famine that occurred in India,.......
.........
PHIL PONCE: According to a report that I read, you personally, when you were a boy, personally fed people who were starving refugees

AMARTYA SEN: Well, my parents - you know - since we relatively prosperous, still not rich, lower middle class family -still not rich -- a lower middle class family - but quite committed on social matters and come from an academic background. My father was a professor; my grandfather was a professor - we were quite involved in that so I was committed to give anyone who asked for food, a tin, a cigarette tin of rice. But since there are many people asking, I was also told that that's what I could give to anyone. I obviously felt very moral in trying to give as much as I could. And it's a very harrowing experience. Obviously, this didn't do anything to solve the famine, but it's a question that got even more strongly engrained in my mind because of the small participation that I happened to do in this context.
pbs.org