DR AMARTYA SEN
“The heights by the great men reached and kept,
Were not attained by sudden flight,
But they while their companions were slept,
Were toiling upward in the night.”
It was a great moment of pride for India and the Indians, when the great Indian economist, Professor Amartya Sen was chosen for the Noble Prize for Economics 1998. Professor Sen was conferred the most coveted International Award for his elegant contribution to ‘Welfare Economics’ which throws light on the understanding of the economic mechanism under the circumstances of famine and poverty. With the recognition for his contribution to welfare economics, Dr Sen (now 79), Master of Trinity College at Cambridge University, became the sixth Indian to get the Noble Prize and the first Asian to merit it for Economics. He was also the first solo winner of the prize for Economics since 1995.
Professor Sen was born on 3rd November, 1933 in Shantinekatan (Bengal). When he was just 9 years of age, he witnessed the destruction caused by the 1943 famine which left indelible marks on his mind. He said “It touched me to find emaciated people arriving from nowhere and dying in the thousands. It made me think about what causes famine and when I took on the famine work in a formal way 30 years later, I was still quite haunted by the memories of that period.” After completing his graduation from Presidency College, Calcutta, Professor Sen went to Trinity College, Cambridge for higher studies, where he received his doctorate. At the age of twenty three, the young Sen already enjoyed status of a celebrity. He was appointed, Head of Department of Economics by the learned academician Dr. BC Roy, that generated a hot debate in the Bengal Assembly, but taken care of by Dr. Roy with his characteristic elan. Dr. Roy hailed Prof Sen, as excellently brilliant and competent to occupy the chair of HoD of Economics.
Professor Sen has published a number of books as well as articles in various journals of Economics, Philosophy, Politics and Decision Theory. His books have been translated into many languages and include Collective Choice and Social Welfare (1970), On Economic Inequality (1973, 1977), On Ethics and Economics,; (1987), Choice, Welfare and the Measurement (1982), Resources, Values and Development (1984), The Standard of Living (1987), Inequality Re-examined (1992) and Development as Freedom (1999), The Argumentative Indian, among others.
His research has ranged over a number of fields in Economics and Philosophy, including social choice theory, welfare economics, theory of measurement, development economics and moral and political philosophy. He is currently the Tvhomas W Lamont University Professor of Economics and Philosophy at Harward University. He is also a senior fellow at the Harvard society of fellows and a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge where he previously served as master from 1998 to 2004. ,
He is a fellow of the British Academy and of the Econometric Society as well as a Foreign Honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Science. He has received honorary doctorates (more than forty) from major university in North America, Europe and Asia. Sen has received various honours
including the ‘Bharat Ratna’ (the highest honour awarded by the President of India). Among the awards he has received the Frank E Seidman Distinguished Award in Political Economy, the Senator Giovanni Agnelli International Prize in Ethics, the Alan Shawn Feinstein World Hunger Award, the Jean Mayer Global Citizenship Award, and the Noble Prize in Economics.
Mr. Sen also served as a Professor in the prestigious Delhi School of Economics and in London School of Economics. He also served as Professor in Oxford University and also in Harvard University.
Noble Laureate Mr. Robert Solow, Professor of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, paid the most telling tribute to Professor Amartya Sen. He said, “Mr. Sen is the conscience of economists. He taps something many economists feel, namely, that you have put your misspent youth into learning all this stuff but you can’t say as an economist whether something is the right thing to do.”
Professor Sen made empirical studies on the cause of famine and its impact in terms of welfare economics and mechanism. In empirical studies, Sen’s applications of his theoretical approach have enhanced our understanding of the actual effect of economic policies to tackle the problems like poverty, famine, hunger. He opined that famines have less to do with food supply than with simple economics.
India is proud of Professor Amartya Sen who followed the footsteps of other Indian Nobel Laureates like Rabindranath Tagore—Literature (1913), CV Raman—Physics (1930), Hargobind Khurana—Medicine (1968), Mother Teresa—Peace (1979) and Subramaniam Chandrashekhar—Physics (1983).
Professor Sen is a man who rose to such grand heights by sheer force of his zeal, dedication, determination and sincerity. He achieved everything with his untiring work, devotional approach and dedicated efforts with a positive and iron will. The International media too reclaimed Professor Sen on getting the Noble Prize. The New York Times editorial wrote, “It is gratifying to see the prize given to a man who has dedicated himself to the issues of poverty and distribution of wealth—a question of supreme importance to far more people than was the work of last year’s….”.