Amartya Sen Quotes About Famine

We have collected for you the TOP of Amartya Sen's best quotes about Famine! Here are collected all the quotes about Famine starting from the birthday of the Economist – November 3, 1933! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 2 sayings of Amartya Sen about Famine. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • No substantial famine has ever occurred in a democratic country - no matter how poor.

    "Development as Freedom". Book by Amartya Sen, 1999.
  • Famines are easy to prevent if there is a serious effort to do so, and a democratic government, facing elections and criticisms from opposition parties and independent newspapers, cannot help but make such an effort. Not surprisingly, while India continued to have famines under British rule right up to independence... they disappeared suddenly with the establishment of a multiparty democracy and... a free press and an active political opposition constitute the best early-warning system a country threaten by famines can have.

    "The 'Silently' Creeping Famine" by Alemayehu G. Mariam, www.huffingtonpost.com. April 18, 2010.
  • I attempted to see famines as broad "economic" problems (concentrating on how people can buy food, or otherwise get entitled to it), rather than in terms of the grossly undifferentiated picture of aggregate food supply for the economy as a whole.

    People  
  • Hardly any famine affects more than 5 percent, almost never more than 10 percent, of the population. The largest proportion of a population affected was the Irish famine of the 1840s, which came close to 10 percent over a number of years.

    Interview with David Barsamian, www.sharedhost.progressive.org. September 29, 2011.
  • From the mid-1970s, I also started work on the causation and prevention of famines.

  • No famine has ever taken place in the history of the world in a functioning democracy.

    Amartya Sen (2011). “The Idea of Justice”, p.343, Harvard University Press
  • If the government is vulnerable to public opinion, then famines are a dreadfully bad thing to have. You can’t win many elections after a famine, and you don’t like being criticized by newspapers, opposition parties in parliament, and so on. Democracy gives the government an immediate political incentive to act.

    Interview with David Barsamian, www.sharedhost.progressive.org. September 29, 2011.
  • Famines occur under a colonial administration, like the British Raj in India or for that matter in Ireland, or under military dictators in one country after another, like Somalia and Ethiopia, or in one-party states like the Soviet Union and China.

    Interview with David Barsamian, www.sharedhost.progressive.org. September 29, 2011.
  • You can’t prevent undernourishment so easily, but famines you can stop with half an effort. Then the question was why don’t the governments stop them?

  • [N]o democracy with a free press has ever experienced a major famine.

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