Sen Vs. Bhagwati: Debate on Growth and Distribution

Book Name  Macroeconomics (HL Ahuja)

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1. Bhagwati’s Approach

2. Evaluation of Bhagwati’s Approach

3. Prof. Amartya Sen on Growth, Poverty and Distribution

4. Evaluation

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Sen Vs. Bhagwati: Debate on Growth and Distribution

Chapter – 47

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Harshit Sharma

Alumnus (BHU)

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Table of Contents

Bhagwati’s Approach

  • The Sen–Bhagwati debate centres on the relative importance of economic growth and distribution/redistribution in achieving poverty reduction and social development in India.

  • Jagdish Bhagwati places greater emphasis on economic growth than on redistribution and is a leading advocate of economic reforms involving:

    • Liberalisation of economic controls through removal of the licensing-permit system and restrictions on industrial activity.

    • A greater role for the private sector in the growth process.

    • Globalisation through liberalisation of foreign trade and foreign investment.

    • He argues that these measures accelerate economic growth and promote social advancement.

  • Bhagwati views economic growth as an instrument of poverty reduction and welfare enhancement, operating through two main channels:

    • Growth creates more gainful employment opportunities for the poor, enabling them to earn higher incomes and escape poverty; higher incomes also allow greater private expenditure on education and health, improving welfare further.

    • Growth increases government revenue, enabling higher public expenditure on education, health, and social welfare programmes targeted at the poor.

  • Bhagwati argues that the growth-centred model has repeatedly demonstrated its ability to reduce poverty and raise living standards, while critics continue to stress the need for redistribution of income and wealth.

  • He rejects Amartya Sen’s claim that Kerala and Bangladesh demonstrate the superiority of redistribution-led development in reducing poverty more rapidly than India as a whole.

  • Bhagwati praises the Gujarat model of development, arguing that it generated substantial employment opportunities through the activities of private corporate firms supported by the government under Modi’s leadership.

  • Criticising Sen’s redistributive development model, Bhagwati argues that in poor countries where the poor vastly outnumber the rich:

    • Redistribution can increase the consumption of the poor only marginally (for example, by merely a chapati a day).

    • Such gains are unlikely to be sustainable in conditions of low income and high population growth.

    • Consequently, for most developing countries, economic growth is the principal strategy for inclusive development, including the poorest and most marginalised sections of society.

  • Bhagwati advocates a market-oriented growth strategy in which:

    • The private sector plays the dominant role in driving economic expansion.

    • The government should provide incentives to private enterprise and remove restrictive controls that hinder its functioning.

    • Liberalisation, Privatisation, and Globalisation (LPG) reforms, initiated in India under Dr. Manmohan Singh, are essential for achieving rapid growth.

    • Rapid economic growth generated through these reforms would ultimately reduce poverty and unemployment.

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