贫困国家的人类发展:私人收入与公共服务的作用

Human Development in Poor Countries: On the Role of Private Incomes and Public Services

Journal of Economic Perspectives · 1993
被引 1008 · 同刊同年前 3%
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

探讨了人类发展视角下,经济增长、减贫与公共服务提供之间的关系,分析了发展政策应如何权衡收入增长与基本能力建设。

Abstract

Development is often taken to mean rising incomes. Discussions of the “goals of development” now often emphasize the reduction of poverty, rather than raising average incomes per se. The role of social services—particularly basic health and education—has also received greater emphasis in the 1980s, viewed mainly as instruments for raising the incomes of the poor. But, in all these approaches, income growth of one sort or another is what development is all about. A rather different view of the meaning of development has recently found expression in the 1990 Human Development Report (HRD) produced by the United Nations Development Programme. A conceptual underpinning for this approach can be found in the work of Amartya Sen. The essence of this view is that human development—what people can actually do and be—is the overriding purpose of economic development. Underdevelopment is viewed as the lack of certain basic capabilities, rather than lack of income per se. We do not aim here to advocate one of these approaches over the other, but rather to explore their implications for development policy. For instance, what does the human development approach imply about the role of economic growth and, in particular, about reducing income poverty? Should development priorities shift toward the provision of public services in poor countries, even if such a shift is at the expense of income growth?

人类发展基本能力收入贫困公共服务