Professor Emeritus Sen Wins Nobel Prize in Economics
By Alvin Powell
Contributing Writer
Three million people died in India's 1943 Bengal famine. Living through
it was a 9-year-old boy named Amartya K. Sen, who, 55 years later, won the
Nobel Prize in Economics for his work on poverty and famine.
Sen, Lamont University Professor Emeritus and a current adjunct
and visiting professor at Harvard, was awarded the 1998 Nobel Prize in Economics
Wednesday "for his contributions to welfare economics." He is
Master of Trinity College in Cambridge, England, a post he was named to
in 1998.
He is Harvard's 37th Nobel laureate.
Sen, 64, has done extensive work on the economics of poverty. He has
developed new ways to predict and fight famine as well as ways to measure
poverty, so that more effective social programs can be designed.
Sen said he was awakened early Wednesday morning by a phone call. When
the phone rang that early, he said, he feared it was bad news.
"It turned out it wasn't bad news; it was very good news,"
Sen said. "I've been giving more interviews today than I ever have
in my life."
Sen said he was happy that the prize will call attention to welfare economics
and to the situation of society's poor.
"I thought that was the best aspect of [the prize]," Sen said.
"All my life I've been concerned with the underside of economics."
Sen is the adjunct professor of population and international health at
the School of Public Health and is based in the Harvard Center for Population
and Development Studies in Cambridge. Sen is also visiting professor of
economics in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Sen was named Lamont University
Professor shortly after his arrival here in 1987 as a professor of economics
and philosophy.
Harvard President Neil L. Rudenstine said the prize is very appropriate
for a man who looks for solutions to problems at the heart of both economics
and philosophy.
"This is the most fitting possible prize," Rudenstine said.
"Amartya works on the most fundamental problems that lie at the crossroads
of economics and philosophy. He brings to those problems imaginative, brilliant
analytic power and a moral vision that keeps him focused upon matters of
equity as well as functionality. He is, in addition, a wonderful person
-- a devoted teacher who has had a profound effect on his Harvard students
as well as his colleagues for many years."
Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Jeremy Knowles said Sen has
had a deep impact at Harvard as well as in the world beyond its academic
walls.
"Amartya has touched the intellectual lives of so many students
and faculty at Harvard. It's wonderful that such a gracious teacher and
illuminating thinker should be so honored," Knowles said.
Sen, a native of India, graduated from Presidency College in Calcutta
and received his bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees from Trinity
College, Cambridge. He taught economics at Jadavpur University in Calcutta;
Trinity College; the Delhi School of Economics; and the London School of
Economics. He was appointed professor of economics at Oxford University
in 1977 and Drummond Professor of Political Economy at Oxford in 1980.
Sen served as president of the Econometric Society in 1984, the International
Economic Association from 1986 to 1989, the Indian Economic Association
in 1989, and the American Economic Association in 1994. He has been named
a Fellow of the British Academy, the Econometric Society, and an honorary
fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.
He is also a foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences and a member of the American Philosophical Association. He
has received dozens of honorary degrees and been awarded several prizes,
including the Edinburgh Medal and the 9th Catalonia International Prize,
both in 1997.
Those who have worked with Sen said it is his concern for the poor as
well as his technical brilliance that make him unique.
"He exhibits his passion for the social dimension of economic issues
very clearly," said Sanjay Reddy, a Harvard Ph.D. student in economics.
Though he serves as Master at Trinity College and continues to hold posts
at Harvard, graduate students who work with him say Sen is generous with
his time.
"It is this aspect of Professor Sen that sets him apart, this deeply
human quality," said Arun Abraham, a master's degree student in public
policy and in theology who has worked as Sen's research assistant for three
years.
Sen has written and edited about 20 books and more than 200 articles.
He had done extensive work on famines, exploring their causes and ways to
fight them. He challenges, for example, the common assumption that famines
are caused by food shortages. In many cases, they can be caused by poverty
and distribution problems and treated by giving hungry people cash, instead
of food, so they can buy it on the open market.
Sen has also done extensive work on ways to measure poverty. Poverty
indexes that simply measure the number of people below the poverty line,
for example, do not provide a very detailed snapshot of the problem. Sen
developed an index that takes into account other factors, such as how poor
the average poor person is and the distribution of resources among the poor.
"If one takes all three of these things into consideration, one
can design a better poverty index," Reddy said.
Sudhir Anand, acting director of the Harvard Center for Population and
Development Studies, said it was "great news" that Sen had received
the prize. Anand said Sen will be at Harvard in November to deliver a paper
at a two-day conference on health equity.
"His work has had a phenomenal impact," Anand said.
He said Sen spends about four months per year at the Center in his capacity
as an adjunct professor.
Sen was in New York Wednesday to attend a memorial service Thursday for
Mahbub ul Haq, a friend and the former finance minister of Pakistan. Ul
Haq developed an index used by the United Nations to measure the wealth of
nations by their citizens' living standards.
Sen said he had no plans for the $963,000 prize and that half of it will
go to the U.S. government in taxes.
Copyright
1998 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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