Deprecated (16384): The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 73 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php. [CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311]Code Context
trigger_error($message, E_USER_DEPRECATED);
}
$message = 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 73 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php.' $stackFrame = (int) 1 $trace = [ (int) 0 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ServerRequest.php', 'line' => (int) 2421, 'function' => 'deprecationWarning', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead.' ] ], (int) 1 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 73, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'catslug' ] ], (int) 2 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Controller/Controller.php', 'line' => (int) 610, 'function' => 'printArticle', 'class' => 'App\Controller\ArtileDetailController', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 3 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 120, 'function' => 'invokeAction', 'class' => 'Cake\Controller\Controller', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 4 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 94, 'function' => '_invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {} ] ], (int) 5 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/BaseApplication.php', 'line' => (int) 235, 'function' => 'dispatch', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 6 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\BaseApplication', 'object' => object(App\Application) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 7 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 162, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 8 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 9 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 88, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 10 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 11 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 96, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 12 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 13 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 51, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 14 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Server.php', 'line' => (int) 98, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\MiddlewareQueue) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 15 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/webroot/index.php', 'line' => (int) 39, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Server', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Server) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ] ] $frame = [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 73, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) { trustProxy => false [protected] params => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] data => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] query => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] cookies => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _environment => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] url => 'latest-news-updates/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522/print' [protected] base => '' [protected] webroot => '/' [protected] here => '/latest-news-updates/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522/print' [protected] trustedProxies => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] _input => null [protected] _detectors => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _detectorCache => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] stream => object(Zend\Diactoros\PhpInputStream) {} [protected] uri => object(Zend\Diactoros\Uri) {} [protected] session => object(Cake\Http\Session) {} [protected] attributes => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] emulatedAttributes => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] uploadedFiles => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] protocol => null [protected] requestTarget => null [private] deprecatedProperties => [ [maximum depth reached] ] }, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'catslug' ] ]deprecationWarning - CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311 Cake\Http\ServerRequest::offsetGet() - CORE/src/Http/ServerRequest.php, line 2421 App\Controller\ArtileDetailController::printArticle() - APP/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line 73 Cake\Controller\Controller::invokeAction() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 610 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 120 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51 Cake\Http\Server::run() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 98
Deprecated (16384): The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 74 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php. [CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311]Code Context
trigger_error($message, E_USER_DEPRECATED);
}
$message = 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 74 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php.' $stackFrame = (int) 1 $trace = [ (int) 0 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ServerRequest.php', 'line' => (int) 2421, 'function' => 'deprecationWarning', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead.' ] ], (int) 1 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 74, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'artileslug' ] ], (int) 2 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Controller/Controller.php', 'line' => (int) 610, 'function' => 'printArticle', 'class' => 'App\Controller\ArtileDetailController', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 3 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 120, 'function' => 'invokeAction', 'class' => 'Cake\Controller\Controller', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 4 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 94, 'function' => '_invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {} ] ], (int) 5 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/BaseApplication.php', 'line' => (int) 235, 'function' => 'dispatch', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 6 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\BaseApplication', 'object' => object(App\Application) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 7 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 162, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 8 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 9 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 88, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 10 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 11 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 96, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 12 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 13 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 51, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 14 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Server.php', 'line' => (int) 98, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\MiddlewareQueue) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 15 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/webroot/index.php', 'line' => (int) 39, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Server', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Server) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ] ] $frame = [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 74, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) { trustProxy => false [protected] params => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] data => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] query => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] cookies => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _environment => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] url => 'latest-news-updates/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522/print' [protected] base => '' [protected] webroot => '/' [protected] here => '/latest-news-updates/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522/print' [protected] trustedProxies => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] _input => null [protected] _detectors => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _detectorCache => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] stream => object(Zend\Diactoros\PhpInputStream) {} [protected] uri => object(Zend\Diactoros\Uri) {} [protected] session => object(Cake\Http\Session) {} [protected] attributes => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] emulatedAttributes => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] uploadedFiles => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] protocol => null [protected] requestTarget => null [private] deprecatedProperties => [ [maximum depth reached] ] }, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'artileslug' ] ]deprecationWarning - CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311 Cake\Http\ServerRequest::offsetGet() - CORE/src/Http/ServerRequest.php, line 2421 App\Controller\ArtileDetailController::printArticle() - APP/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line 74 Cake\Controller\Controller::invokeAction() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 610 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 120 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51 Cake\Http\Server::run() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 98
Warning (512): Unable to emit headers. Headers sent in file=/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Debugger.php line=853 [CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 48]Code Contextif (Configure::read('debug')) {
trigger_error($message, E_USER_WARNING);
} else {
$response = object(Cake\Http\Response) { 'status' => (int) 200, 'contentType' => 'text/html', 'headers' => [ 'Content-Type' => [ [maximum depth reached] ] ], 'file' => null, 'fileRange' => [], 'cookies' => object(Cake\Http\Cookie\CookieCollection) {}, 'cacheDirectives' => [], 'body' => '<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <link rel="canonical" href="https://im4change.in/<pre class="cake-error"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-trace').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-trace').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none');"><b>Notice</b> (8)</a>: Undefined variable: urlPrefix [<b>APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp</b>, line <b>8</b>]<div id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-trace" class="cake-stack-trace" style="display: none;"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Code</a> <a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 22372, 'title' => 'Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div align="justify"> -The Hindu </div> <p align="justify"> <br /> <em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. </p> <p align="justify"> Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Instrument for progress</em> </p> <p align="justify"> First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. </p> <p align="justify"> Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Education and nutrition</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Health care</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Kerala model</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em> </p>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Hindu, 6 September, 2013, http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade/article5097619.ece?homepage=true', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 22522, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 22372, 'metaTitle' => 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'metaKeywords' => 'Human Development,Health,education,amartya sen,Jagdish Bhagwati', 'metaDesc' => ' -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks...', 'disp' => '<div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot;</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot;</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 22372, 'title' => 'Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div align="justify"> -The Hindu </div> <p align="justify"> <br /> <em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. </p> <p align="justify"> Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Instrument for progress</em> </p> <p align="justify"> First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. </p> <p align="justify"> Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Education and nutrition</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Health care</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Kerala model</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em> </p>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Hindu, 6 September, 2013, http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade/article5097619.ece?homepage=true', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 22522, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 3 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 4 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 22372 $metaTitle = 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar' $metaKeywords = 'Human Development,Health,education,amartya sen,Jagdish Bhagwati' $metaDesc = ' -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks...' $disp = '<div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot;</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot;</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>latest-news-updates/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks..."/> <script src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-1.10.2.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-migrate.min.js"></script> <script language="javascript" type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function () { var img = $("img")[0]; // Get my img elem var pic_real_width, pic_real_height; $("<img/>") // Make in memory copy of image to avoid css issues .attr("src", $(img).attr("src")) .load(function () { pic_real_width = this.width; // Note: $(this).width() will not pic_real_height = this.height; // work for in memory images. }); }); </script> <style type="text/css"> @media screen { div.divFooter { display: block; } } @media print { .printbutton { display: none !important; } } </style> </head> <body> <table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="98%" align="center"> <tr> <td class="top_bg"> <div class="divFooter"> <img src="https://im4change.in/images/logo1.jpg" height="59" border="0" alt="Resource centre on India's rural distress" style="padding-top:14px;"/> </div> </td> </tr> <tr> <td id="topspace"> </td> </tr> <tr id="topspace"> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-bottom:1px solid #000; padding-top:10px;" class="printbutton"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%"> <h1 class="news_headlines" style="font-style:normal"> <strong>Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar</strong></h1> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%" style="font-family:Arial, 'Segoe Script', 'Segoe UI', sans-serif, serif"><font size="3"> <div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for "redistributing" the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Drèze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of "growth-mediated security," which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: "Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth." Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: "Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process."</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Drèze and Sen note: "It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role."</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the "provision by the private sector" of "food, education and health" to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone "insisted" that "the government alone must provide them," as Bhagwati claims. Drèze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. "[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need." At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as "realism," is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a "smugness based on cynicism," as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Drèze and Sen argue that this "cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries." Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of "asymmetric information." Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that "India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica." They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: "to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it."</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the "plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today." But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. "There is a world of difference," according to Drèze and Sen, "between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India)."</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $maxBufferLength = (int) 8192 $file = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Debugger.php' $line = (int) 853 $message = 'Unable to emit headers. Headers sent in file=/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Debugger.php line=853'Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emit() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 48 Cake\Http\Server::emit() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 141 [main] - ROOT/webroot/index.php, line 39
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'' : 'none');"><b>Notice</b> (8)</a>: Undefined variable: urlPrefix [<b>APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp</b>, line <b>8</b>]<div id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-trace" class="cake-stack-trace" style="display: none;"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Code</a> <a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 22372, 'title' => 'Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div align="justify"> -The Hindu </div> <p align="justify"> <br /> <em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. </p> <p align="justify"> Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Instrument for progress</em> </p> <p align="justify"> First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. </p> <p align="justify"> Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Education and nutrition</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Health care</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Kerala model</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em> </p>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Hindu, 6 September, 2013, http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade/article5097619.ece?homepage=true', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 22522, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 22372, 'metaTitle' => 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'metaKeywords' => 'Human Development,Health,education,amartya sen,Jagdish Bhagwati', 'metaDesc' => ' -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks...', 'disp' => '<div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot;</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot;</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 22372, 'title' => 'Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div align="justify"> -The Hindu </div> <p align="justify"> <br /> <em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. </p> <p align="justify"> Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Instrument for progress</em> </p> <p align="justify"> First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. </p> <p align="justify"> Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Education and nutrition</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Health care</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Kerala model</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em> </p>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Hindu, 6 September, 2013, http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade/article5097619.ece?homepage=true', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 22522, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 3 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 4 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 22372 $metaTitle = 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar' $metaKeywords = 'Human Development,Health,education,amartya sen,Jagdish Bhagwati' $metaDesc = ' -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks...' $disp = '<div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot;</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot;</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>latest-news-updates/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks..."/> <script src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-1.10.2.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-migrate.min.js"></script> <script language="javascript" type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function () { var img = $("img")[0]; // Get my img elem var pic_real_width, pic_real_height; $("<img/>") // Make in memory copy of image to avoid css issues .attr("src", $(img).attr("src")) .load(function () { pic_real_width = this.width; // Note: $(this).width() will not pic_real_height = this.height; // work for in memory images. }); }); </script> <style type="text/css"> @media screen { div.divFooter { display: block; } } @media print { .printbutton { display: none !important; } } </style> </head> <body> <table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="98%" align="center"> <tr> <td class="top_bg"> <div class="divFooter"> <img src="https://im4change.in/images/logo1.jpg" height="59" border="0" alt="Resource centre on India's rural distress" style="padding-top:14px;"/> </div> </td> </tr> <tr> <td id="topspace"> </td> </tr> <tr id="topspace"> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-bottom:1px solid #000; padding-top:10px;" class="printbutton"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%"> <h1 class="news_headlines" style="font-style:normal"> <strong>Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar</strong></h1> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%" style="font-family:Arial, 'Segoe Script', 'Segoe UI', sans-serif, serif"><font size="3"> <div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for "redistributing" the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Drèze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of "growth-mediated security," which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: "Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth." Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: "Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process."</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Drèze and Sen note: "It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role."</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the "provision by the private sector" of "food, education and health" to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone "insisted" that "the government alone must provide them," as Bhagwati claims. Drèze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. "[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need." At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as "realism," is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a "smugness based on cynicism," as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Drèze and Sen argue that this "cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries." Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of "asymmetric information." Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that "India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica." They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: "to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it."</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the "plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today." But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. "There is a world of difference," according to Drèze and Sen, "between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India)."</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $reasonPhrase = 'OK'header - [internal], line ?? Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emitStatusLine() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 148 Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emit() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 54 Cake\Http\Server::emit() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 141 [main] - ROOT/webroot/index.php, line 39
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'' : 'none');"><b>Notice</b> (8)</a>: Undefined variable: urlPrefix [<b>APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp</b>, line <b>8</b>]<div id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-trace" class="cake-stack-trace" style="display: none;"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Code</a> <a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr6802b5c92e0c9-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 22372, 'title' => 'Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div align="justify"> -The Hindu </div> <p align="justify"> <br /> <em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. </p> <p align="justify"> Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Instrument for progress</em> </p> <p align="justify"> First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. </p> <p align="justify"> Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Education and nutrition</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Health care</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Kerala model</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em> </p>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Hindu, 6 September, 2013, http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade/article5097619.ece?homepage=true', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 22522, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 22372, 'metaTitle' => 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'metaKeywords' => 'Human Development,Health,education,amartya sen,Jagdish Bhagwati', 'metaDesc' => ' -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks...', 'disp' => '<div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot;</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot;</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 22372, 'title' => 'Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div align="justify"> -The Hindu </div> <p align="justify"> <br /> <em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. </p> <p align="justify"> Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Instrument for progress</em> </p> <p align="justify"> First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. </p> <p align="justify"> Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Education and nutrition</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Health care</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Kerala model</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot; </p> <p align="justify"> Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em> </p>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Hindu, 6 September, 2013, http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade/article5097619.ece?homepage=true', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 22522, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 3 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 4 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 22372 $metaTitle = 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar' $metaKeywords = 'Human Development,Health,education,amartya sen,Jagdish Bhagwati' $metaDesc = ' -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks...' $disp = '<div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'&ecirc;tre of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for &quot;redistributing&quot; the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Dr&egrave;ze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of &quot;growth-mediated security,&quot; which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: &quot;Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth.&quot; Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: &quot;Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen note: &quot;It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role.&quot;</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the &quot;provision by the private sector&quot; of &quot;food, education and health&quot; to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone &quot;insisted&quot; that &quot;the government alone must provide them,&quot; as Bhagwati claims. Dr&egrave;ze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. &quot;[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need.&quot; At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as &quot;realism,&quot; is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a &quot;smugness based on cynicism,&quot; as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Dr&egrave;ze and Sen argue that this &quot;cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries.&quot; Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of &quot;asymmetric information.&quot; Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that &quot;India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica.&quot; They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: &quot;to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it.&quot;</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Dr&egrave;ze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the &quot;plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today.&quot; But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. &quot;There is a world of difference,&quot; according to Dr&egrave;ze and Sen, &quot;between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India).&quot;</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>latest-news-updates/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. 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But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for "redistributing" the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Drèze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of "growth-mediated security," which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: "Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth." Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: "Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process."</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Drèze and Sen note: "It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role."</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the "provision by the private sector" of "food, education and health" to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone "insisted" that "the government alone must provide them," as Bhagwati claims. Drèze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. "[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need." At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as "realism," is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a "smugness based on cynicism," as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Drèze and Sen argue that this "cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries." Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of "asymmetric information." Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that "India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica." They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: "to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it."</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the "plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today." But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. "There is a world of difference," according to Drèze and Sen, "between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India)."</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $cookies = [] $values = [ (int) 0 => 'text/html; charset=UTF-8' ] $name = 'Content-Type' $first = true $value = 'text/html; charset=UTF-8'header - [internal], line ?? Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emitHeaders() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 181 Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emit() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 55 Cake\Http\Server::emit() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 141 [main] - ROOT/webroot/index.php, line 39
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$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 22372, 'title' => 'Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div align="justify"> -The Hindu </div> <p align="justify"> <br /> <em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. </p> <p align="justify"> Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for "redistributing" the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Instrument for progress</em> </p> <p align="justify"> First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Drèze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of "growth-mediated security," which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: "Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth." Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. </p> <p align="justify"> Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: "Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process." </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Education and nutrition</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Drèze and Sen note: "It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role." </p> <p align="justify"> Fourth, Sen is not against the "provision by the private sector" of "food, education and health" to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone "insisted" that "the government alone must provide them," as Bhagwati claims. Drèze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. "[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need." At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as "realism," is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a "smugness based on cynicism," as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Health care</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Drèze and Sen argue that this "cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries." Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of "asymmetric information." Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. </p> <p align="justify"> Drèze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that "India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica." They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: "to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it." </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Kerala model</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Drèze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the "plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today." But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. 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But the recent attacks...', 'disp' => '<div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for "redistributing" the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Drèze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of "growth-mediated security," which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: "Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth." Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: "Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process."</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Drèze and Sen note: "It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role."</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the "provision by the private sector" of "food, education and health" to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone "insisted" that "the government alone must provide them," as Bhagwati claims. Drèze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. "[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need." At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as "realism," is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a "smugness based on cynicism," as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Drèze and Sen argue that this "cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries." Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of "asymmetric information." Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that "India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica." They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: "to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it."</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the "plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today." But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. "There is a world of difference," according to Drèze and Sen, "between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India)."</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 22372, 'title' => 'Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div align="justify"> -The Hindu </div> <p align="justify"> <br /> <em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. </p> <p align="justify"> Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for "redistributing" the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Instrument for progress</em> </p> <p align="justify"> First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Drèze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of "growth-mediated security," which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: "Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth." Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. </p> <p align="justify"> Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: "Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process." </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Education and nutrition</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Drèze and Sen note: "It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role." </p> <p align="justify"> Fourth, Sen is not against the "provision by the private sector" of "food, education and health" to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone "insisted" that "the government alone must provide them," as Bhagwati claims. Drèze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. "[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need." At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as "realism," is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a "smugness based on cynicism," as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Health care</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Drèze and Sen argue that this "cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries." Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of "asymmetric information." Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. </p> <p align="justify"> Drèze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that "India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica." They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: "to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it." </p> <p align="justify"> <em>Kerala model</em> </p> <p align="justify"> Drèze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the "plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today." But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. "There is a world of difference," according to Drèze and Sen, "between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India)." </p> <p align="justify"> Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced. </p> <p align="justify"> <em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em> </p>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Hindu, 6 September, 2013, http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade/article5097619.ece?homepage=true', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'charge-of-the-unenlightened-brigade-ak-shiva-kumar-22522', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 22522, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 3 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 4 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 22372 $metaTitle = 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar' $metaKeywords = 'Human Development,Health,education,amartya sen,Jagdish Bhagwati' $metaDesc = ' -The Hindu Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks...' $disp = '<div align="justify">-The Hindu</div><p align="justify"><br /><em>Jagdish Bhagwati's attacks on Amartya Sen are based on a series of misattributions and obscure the real issues on which the two economists differ</em></p><p align="justify">Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ.</p><p align="justify">Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for "redistributing" the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions.</p><p align="justify"><em>Instrument for progress</em></p><p align="justify">First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Drèze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of "growth-mediated security," which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: "Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth." Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people.</p><p align="justify">Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: "Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process."</p><p align="justify"><em>Education and nutrition</em></p><p align="justify">Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Drèze and Sen note: "It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role."</p><p align="justify">Fourth, Sen is not against the "provision by the private sector" of "food, education and health" to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone "insisted" that "the government alone must provide them," as Bhagwati claims. Drèze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. "[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need." At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as "realism," is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a "smugness based on cynicism," as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi.</p><p align="justify"><em>Health care</em></p><p align="justify">Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Drèze and Sen argue that this "cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries." Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of "asymmetric information." Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people.</p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that "India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica." They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: "to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it."</p><p align="justify"><em>Kerala model</em></p><p align="justify">Drèze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the "plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today." But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. "There is a world of difference," according to Drèze and Sen, "between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India)."</p><p align="justify">Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced.</p><p align="justify"><em>(A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) </em></p>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'
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Charge of the unenlightened brigade-AK Shiva Kumar |
-The Hindu
Rich and lively public debates are the raison d'être of any democracy. But the recent attacks by Professor Jagdish Bhagwati on Dr. Amartya Sen confound the real issues on which Sen and Bhagwati differ. Bhagwati tries to position himself as a proponent of growth that would benefit the poor through later redistribution. In contrast, Sen is portrayed as being anti-growth, and as advocating only for "redistributing" the meagre resources that are available. This is a complete misdiagnosis, based on a number of serious misattributions. Instrument for progress First, Sen has never denounced economic growth. On the contrary, he has repeatedly argued for the importance of economic growth as an instrument for economic progress (but not as an end in itself), beginning with his first publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Economics in 1957. More recently, in Hunger and Public Action, published in 1989, Jean Drèze and Sen outline in some detail the strategy of "growth-mediated security," which calls for promoting economic growth and directing the greater general affluence and also larger public revenues to combat deprivation and enhance health care and education. In a recent interview to Prospect's Jonathan Derbyshire, Sen has reaffirmed his position: "Economic growth is important precisely because it can help people to lead better lives. But to take growth itself to be a fetishistic object of admiration is part of the problem. I think we have to understand that, ultimately, not having an educated, healthy population is not only bad for well-being but also bad, in the long run, for sustaining our economic growth." Sen has never been against growth in general, but has shown the inadequacy of the type of growth that fails to improve the lives of ordinary people. Second, he has consistently argued that economic growth is an important means of development but the intrinsic ends or goals of development have to be more than simply material advancement. His Development as Freedom opens with the following sentences: "Development can be seen, it is argued here, as a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. Focusing on human freedoms contrasts with narrower views of development, such as identifying development with the growth of gross national product, or with the rise in personal incomes, or with industrialization, or with technological advance, or with social modernization. Growth of GNP or of individual incomes can, of course, be very important as means to expanding the freedoms enjoyed by the members of the society ... Viewing development in terms of expanding substantive freedoms directs attention to the ends that make development important, rather than merely to some of the means that, inter alia, play a prominent role in the process." Education and nutrition Third, Sen has consistently championed health, education and nutrition because they are intrinsically significant as well as an important means to boost economic growth. There is, in fact, no contradiction here: the advancement of human capability is both a part of enhancement of human freedom and well-being and a significant way of promoting and sustaining high levels of economic growth. An educated and healthy labour force is both a contributor to good human living and freedom, and to advancing and sustaining a dynamic and expanding economy. In their recent book, An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions, Drèze and Sen note: "It is necessary to recognize the role of growth in facilitating development in the form of enhancing human lives and freedoms, but it is also necessary in this context to appreciate how growth possibilities of a country depend in turn on the advancement of human capabilities (through education, health care and other facilities), in which the state can play a constructive role." Fourth, Sen is not against the "provision by the private sector" of "food, education and health" to the deprived. Nor has he ever said or let alone "insisted" that "the government alone must provide them," as Bhagwati claims. Drèze and Sen discuss in An Uncertain Glory, the limitations of an exclusive reliance on private markets for promoting human development. "[A]symmetric information between buyers and sellers, and more generally a lack of adequate knowledge on the part of the uninformed patients or customers limits their ability to choose sensibly and opens them up to exploitative practices. The drive for private profits can diverge from the goals of social welfare. Since profitability is conditional on the ability of the purchaser, or the consumer, to pay, private profits can often be a very inadequate guide to the priorities of public need." At the same time, they discuss the importance of improving the delivery and reach of public services and suggest various ways of promoting accountability and efficiency in governmental operations (which is an important focus of their joint book). To take state action to be hopelessly doomed and neglecting the means of bettering them, which often masquerade as "realism," is, in fact, a resignation to the lethargy of doing nothing. It is a "smugness based on cynicism," as Sen said in a public speech in Delhi. Health care Fifth, while acknowledging that private schools offer a legitimate alternative, Drèze and Sen argue that this "cannot in any way, take over the role that state schools are meant to play and have played in the educational transformation of most countries." Worldwide experience has demonstrated the power of public education in equitable educational development. There are at least four problems with private schools: affordability; asymmetry in information and knowledge of families and students; insufficient competition even from government schools; and the externalities of school education as well as indivisibilities of acquired knowledge. Similarly, health is also a case of "asymmetric information." Given that patients generally know much less than the doctors about what they are suffering from and what the best treatment is, the possibility of severe exploitation of patients by profit-seeking private providers is a real danger. And quite often it is also the actual experience of vulnerable people. Drèze and Sen point out that given the limitations of market arrangements and of private insurance in the field of health care, public provision of health services has an important foundational role to play in the realisation of universal health coverage (as it has done in nearly every country in the world that has achieved universality of health coverage). They draw attention to the fact that "India has moved towards reliance on private health care without developing the solid rock of support of basic public health facilities that has been the basis of almost every successful health transition in the history of the world - from Britain to Japan, from China to Brazil, from South Korea to Costa Rica." They argue that transforming India's health care system to fulfil the commitment to universal health coverage would require, first of all: "to stop believing, against all empirical evidence, that India's transition from poor health to good health could be easily achieved through private health care and insurance. This recognition does not, of course, imply that there is no role at all for the private sector in health. Most health care systems in the world have space for private provision, and there is no compelling reason for India to dispense with it." Kerala model Drèze and Sen acknowledge and appreciate the contribution made by the "plentiful presence of the private sector in medicine in Kerala today." But they also point out that Kerala's health transition started with a commitment by the State to universal coverage. It was only later that the private sector in health became a major contributor to the health care of the people in Kerala - supported by the rapid growth in incomes (closely related to the expansion of human capabilities). They go on to draw an important lesson. "There is a world of difference," according to Drèze and Sen, "between (1) allowing - and even encouraging - the auxiliary facilities of private health care to enrich a reasonably well-functioning state system (as happened in Kerala), and (2) trying to rely on private health care when the state provides very little in terms of health facilities (as in many other states, particularly in north India)." Sometimes, heat can generate more smoke than light, obscuring the real issues that need to be discussed. Endless repetition of confused - and false - attributions cannot alter the nature of the real questions that have to be faced. (A.K. Shiva Kumar is a development economist and lives in New Delhi.) |