Title: Human Development Approach: Concepts and Evolution
1Human Development Approach Concepts and Evolution
- Prof. S. Mahendra Dev
- Chairman, Commission for Agricultural Costs and
Prices (CACP), Govt. of India
2Contents
- Human development (HD) approach
- How is it different compared to other
approaches? GDP, human capital, social
development, living standards - Capability approach, human rights approaches
- Evolution of HD approach over time
- Inclusive growth, social security etc. in human
development perspective - Critique or problems in HD approach
3Human Development Approach
- Human development concept is not a new one.
- Evolution of Human development concept can be
traced from the writings of renowned thinkers and
philosophers of ancient times. - Aristotle, argued that wealth is evidently not
the good we are seeking, for it is merely useful
and for the sake of something else. - Another great philosopher, Immanuel Kant argues
that human beings are ends in themselves, rather
than the means to other ends. - Adam Smith , Malthus, Karl Marx, J. S. Mill and
many other modern economists have also come
forward with the similar idea of treating human
beings as the real end of all activities.
4Human Development Approach
- The idea of human development has in recent years
strongly influenced evaluations, development
debates and policies - Human development is a process of enlarging
peoples choices and strengthening human
capabilities. - The term human development has been seen as
expansion of human capabilities, a widening of
choices, an enhancement of freedoms and a
fulfillment of human rights. - Such a perspective shifts policy attention from
mechanically expanding incomes to fruitfully
ensuring that higher incomes translate into
greater freedoms to people women, children and
men - The most critical of these wide-ranging choices
are to live
5Human Development Approach
- a long and healthy life, to be educated and to
have resource access for a decent standard of
living. These three basic choices reflected in
HDI - But many additional choices are valued by people.
- They range from political, social, economic and
cultural freedoms to opportunities for being
productive and creative, self respect and human
rights. - Human freedom is vital for human development.
- Putting people at the Centre
- The HD concept is inspired by Amartya Sens
capability approach. We will discuss this later. - The HD approach will be more clear when we
compare with other concepts like economic
growth, human capital, social development etc.
6Economic Growth and Human Development
- The difference between economic growth and the
human development is that the first focuses
exclusively on the expansion of only one choice
i.e. income - While HD approach embraces the enlargement of all
human choices whether economic, social,
cultural or political. - Economic growth in the HD approach is seen as the
means and not the ends of development. - Data across countries show that the association
between GNP per capita on the one hand and
health, nutrition, morbidity and mortality is far
from simple.
7Economic Growth and Human Development
- South Africa, Brazil, Oman with much higher GNP
per head of China and Sri Lanka has much lower
life expectancy and higher infant mortality - Here we find that the economic prosperity of
these countries have not acquired a human
context. - Unless societies recognize that their real wealth
is their people, an excessive obsession with
creating material wealth can obscure the goal of
enriching human lives. - It is, however, wrong to suggest that economic
growth is unnecessary for human development. No
sustained improvement in human well being is
possible without growth .
8Economic growth and Human Development
- It is also wrong to suggest that high economic
growth automatically translate into higher levels
of HD - Thus, the connections between growth and human
development are neither obvious nor automatic. - Five types of policy failure that occur when the
links are broken - --Jobless growth ----Ruthless growth only few
benefit - --Voiceless growth no democracy
- --Rootless growth cultural identity
- --Futureless growth sustainable problems
- But, when links are strong, growth and HD are
mutually reinforcing.
9 How is HD approach differ from other approaches
- Inspite of broad and complex nature of human
development, most people tend to mistake human
development for social development and to
associate solely with investments in health,
education and nutrition - While others mistakenly equate human development
with human resource development. - In other words, it is wrongly assumed that HD
approach adds little to concepts of human capital
and basic needs. - Human development is motivated by the search for
freedom, well-being and the dignity of
individuals in all societies, concerns that are
absent from concepts of social development, human
capital and basic needs
10How is HD approach differ from other approaches
- In the HD approach, development is about peoples
well being and the expansion of their
capabilities and functionings. Expansion of
material output is treated as a means and not an
end - The ends-means relationship is reversed in
theories of human capital formation or human
resource development, in which human beings are
treated as a means to economic growth - HD approach views investment in education and
health as intrinsic value (for human lives) and
instrumental value (for promoting economic
growth) - The human capital or HRD approach stresses how
education and health enhance productivity, and
have important value for promoting economic growth
11How is HD approach differ from other approaches
- The basic needs approach focuses on access to
social services to meet basic material needs for
a decent life. - This approach does not elaborate on the reasons
why certain needs are important. - In the absence of such considerations, the basic
needs approach ends up emphasizing the supply of
materials rather than what these material goods
allow people to do. - HD approach is also broader than living
standards approach. Living standards relate to
specifically to the richness of the persons own
life, whereas a person may value his or her
capability also to be socially useful (going
beyond her own living standa.)
12HD Approach
- HD approach differ from other approaches in three
important ways - -- definition of ends and means
- --concern with human freedoms and dignity
- --concern with human agency i.e. the role of
people in development - There are several implications in adopting HD
approach and framework as compared to other
approaches - -- The focus of policy can not be based merely on
the generation of more and more income. How
additional income is used, and the degree to
which it improves the quality of peoples lives
must be given equal weight.
13HD approach
- Second, as a corollary, growth in incomes can not
be the dominant criterion for judging how
societies are faring. The HD approach generates
new set of evaluative questions. - --Are people enjoying an expansion in their
capabilities - --has there been a significant improvement in the
quality of peoples lives? - --Do they have more of what they cherish?
- -- How free are they? How equal?
- Third, focusing on human lives as the goal of
development results in the articulation of very
different policy concerns. -
14HD Approach
- Thus, in the HD framework, discussions on
globalization go beyond examining the impact on
trade, capital flows and economic growth, to
consider the changing opportunities and new
insecurities in peoples lives. - Fourth, HD is motivated by a concern for freedom,
well-being and the dignity of individuals in
society, issues that are not central to policy
formulation. - It emphasizes political and social freedoms
through enhanced participation and inclusive
democracy as fundamental to the realization and
sustainability of social and economic goals.
15Capabilities Approach
- Human Development Approach has been profoundly
inspired by Amartya Sens capability approach. - While Sens works cover an extremely wide range
of topics, his capability approach has led to a
critical evolution in the field of economics and
in social sciences in general. Again the roots go
back to Aristotle, Adam Smith and Karl Marx. - The basic idea of the capability approach is that
social arrangements should aim to expand peoples
capabilities their freedom to promote or
achieve valuable beings and doings. - An essential test of progress, development, or
poverty reduction, is whether people have greater
freedoms.
16Capabilities Approach
- The central items in the capability approach are
- (a) Functionings (2) Capabilities (3) Agency
- Functionings are the valuable activities and
states that make up peoples well being such as
a healthy body, being safe, being calm, an
educated mind, a good job. - Functionings may relate to goods and income but
they describe what a person is able to do or be
as a result. (beings and doings). When popels
basic need for food (a commodity) is met, they
enjoy the functioning of being well nourished
17Capabilities Approach
- Some functionings may be very basic (being
nourished, literate, clothed) and others might be
quite complex (being able to play a virtuoso drum
solo) - Capabilities are the alternative combinations
of functionings that are feasible for ( a person)
to achieve. Put differently, they are the
substantive freedoms she or he enjoys to lead the
kind of life he or she has reason to value. - Capabilities are a kind of opportunity freedom.
Just like a person with much money in her pocket
can buy many different things, a person with many
capabilities could enjoy many different
activities, pursue different life paths.
18Capabilities Approach
- Activities or states that people do not value or
have reason to value could not be called
capabilities. - The difference between functioning and capability
can be clarified with an example. - Sens classic illustration of two persons who
both dont eat enough to enable the functioning
of being well nourished. - The first person is a victim of famine in
Ethiopia, while the second person decided to go
on a hunger strike in front of Chinese embassy in
Washington to protest against the occupation of
tibet.
19Capability Approach
- Although both persons lack the functionings of
being well nourished, the freedom they had to
avoid being hungry is crucial. The second person
has the capability to avoid under-nourishment. - Agency Agency refers to a persons ability to
pursue and realize goals that he or she values
and has reason to value. An agent is someone who
acts and brings about change. - Agency expands the horizons of concern beyond a
persons own well being. In this perspective,
people are viewed to be active, creative, and
able to act on behalf of their aspirations.
Participation, public debate, democratic
practice, and empowerment.
20Capability Approach
- A bicycle provides a good example for better
understanding of terms. A person may own or be
able to use a bicycle (resource). By riding the
bicycle, the person moves around the town and we
assume, values this mobility (functioning). - However, if the person is unable to ride the
bicycle (because, perhaps,she has no balance),
then having a bicycle would not infact result in
this functioning. - In this case, the access to resource coupled with
the persons characteristics (balance), creates
the capability for the person to move around the
town when she wishes.
21Capability Approach
- Let us suppose that the person having this
capability to leap upon a bicycle and pedal over
to a friends house for lunch- thus having a
capability that contributes to happiness or
utility. - Resource Functioning Capability Utility
-
- Bicycle - Mobility - To cycle -
Pleasure - Thus bicycle example illustrates how the various
concept are related to one another when they
coincide nicely. - But the question is which concept should we focus
on? Which will be distorted most often? The
capability approach argues that utility can be
distorted by personality or adaptive preferences -
22Capability Approach
- functioning can be enjoyed in a stifled
environment and a bicycle can be useless if you
cannot balance, so capability represents the most
accurate space in which to investigate and
advance the various forms of human well being. - However, Martha Nussabam argues that Sens
Capability Approach is incomplete. - Since what people consider to be valuable and
relevant can often be the product of structures
of inequality and discrimination and because not
all human freedom are equally valuable for
example, the freedom to pollute is not of equal
value to the freedom to care for the environment-
she argues that one needs to go beyond this
incompleteness so that respect equal freedom
23Capability Approach
- She has proposed a list of central human
capabilities for evaluative space for public
policy. - Her list is Life bodily health bodily
integrity senses, imagination, thought
emotions practical reason affiliation other
species play control over ones environment
(political and material). - To conclude, Capability approach advocates for
removal of obstacles in peoples lives,
increasing their freedom to achieve functioning
that they value. - Sen summarizes role of human capabilities as
- -- their direct relevance to the well being and
freedom - -- their indirect role to economic production
- --their indirect role through influencing social
change
24Human Rights Approach
- Another influential idea in policy circles in
tune with the core principles of human
development and Capability Approach was Human
Rights paradigm. Human rights evolved as a
response to post war narratives. - The HDR (2000) puts Human Rights and Human
Development share a common vision and a common
purpose to secure freedom, well being and
dignity of all people everywhere. - The Universal Declaration on Human Rights (1948)
sets out fundamental freedoms and human rights to
which all people everywhere are entitled equally
on the basis of non-discrimination. - These include the human rights to fundamental
benefits including food, health, housing, an
adequate
25Human Rights Approach
- standard of living, education, protection of the
family, democracy, participation, rule of law,
and protection against enslavement, torture,
cruel or inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment. - Subsequent human rights conventions have
translated these human rights into legally
binding form (under human rights international
law). - First generation rights (civil, political),
second generation economic, social, cultural - Legally binding international treaties provide
more specific protection to particular groups
(e.g. women and children) and in relation to
particular violations (e.g. slavery and racial
discrimination)
26Human Rights Approach
- Internationally recognized human rights are
generally viewed in terms of three basic
principles Universal (to all), Equal (equality
and non-discrimination), inalienable (can not be
transferred) - Also the principle of indivisibility and
interdependence of human rights - Who is responsible for upholding human rights?
The assignment of responsibility is central to
human rights approach. Who should be doing or
whom? Human right holders and Obligation-holders
or duty-holders - Although human rights are a moral concept, they
have also developed into specific legal tools
with established institutional mechanisms for
monitoring, accountability and enforcement.
27Human Rights Approach
- The primary burden for upholding human rights is
assigned to nationa-states or governments. - Coordination with othersNGOs,national
institutions, other countries, international
organizations - What are the obligations of nation states? More
than 150 countries have promised to defend the
core civil, political rights and social,
cultural, economic rights recognized in
international human rights law. - Three types of obligations (a) to respect human
rights (b) to protect human rights (c) to
promote human rights - International recognition of individual and
collective obligations was underlined by the
adoption of the Declaration on the Right to
Development by the UN General Assembly in 1986
28Human Rights and Human Development
- How do human rights and the human development and
capability approaches relate to one another? - They have much in common. They reflect the maxim
that individuals should not be treated as a means
to an end, but should be treated as ends. - Human rights suggest that all people have claims
to social and economic arrangements that protect
them from the worst abuses and deprivations, and
that enable them to enjoy their security and
dignity as human beings. - Human development, in turn, is a process of
expanding valuable human freedoms the range of
valuable things that a person can do and be
29Human rights and Human Development
- What human rights add to HD? To have a particular
right is to have a claim on other people or
institutions that they should help or collaborate
in ensuring access to some freedom. - This insistence on a claim on others takes us
beyond the idea of human development. - In the HD approach, the normative connection
between laudable goals and reason for action does
not yield specific duties on the part of other
individuals, collectives or social institutions
to bring about human development. - This is where human rights approach offers useful
additional perspective for HD approach
30Human Rights and Human Development
- What HD adds to human rights? Just as human
rights contribute to HD, so HD helps to augment
the reach of human rights approach. - The tradition of articulation and definiteness in
the analysis of human development which can add
something to the literature on human rights. - By attending to the process of HD, human rights
analysis can get a fuller assessment of what is
feasible given the resource and institutional
constraints that prevail within a society, and a
clear understanding of the ways and means of
making a more attractive set of policy choices
feasible. - Thus, when HD and human rights advance together,
they reinforce each other.
31Evolution of Human Development Approach
- Two things here.
- (a)Evolution from economic growth to human
development - (b) How HDRs tackled the problem of ends and
means in its reports over time? - Evolution over time
- --Economic growth
- --Redistribution with growth
- --Human capital approach
- --Basic Needs approach, Physical quality of life
index - -- Amartya Sens capability approach
- --Human Development Approach
32HOW HDRs tackled the problem of ends and means
- HDRs different from growth approach
- In embracing HD approach, the HDRs have
highlighted two central messages - (a) defining well being as the purpose of
development and treating economic growth as a
means (b) this ends-means relationships has been
developed in new concepts and measures, and in
articulating policy priorities. - Successive reports have shown that countries with
similar GNPs have shown different levels of
human development levels.
33HOW HDRs tackled the problem of ends and means
- With focus on ends, HDRs have defined deprivation
and inequality in non-income terms. HDR 1997 made
a conceptual breakthrough on poverty by
introducing the concept of human poverty. - This defines poverty as deprivation in lives and
choices rather income. - On globalization, HDR 1999 goes beyond the
impact of trade and capital liberalization on
economic growth. It focuses instead on the
changing opportunities in peoples lives and
raises concerns over new insecurities that are
being created.
34HOW HDRs tackled the problem of ends and means
- Technology, environment topics also focus on
human development rather than on incomes. - Another human-centred concept that has had
considerable impact on public debates is the
notion of human security. It focuses on the
security of people rather than on the security of
national borders. - In looking at mobilizing human agency through
collective action, HDR 1993, on participation,
argues for two strategies (a) strengthening
institutions of civil society (b) decentralizing
power from capital cities to regions and villages.
35Inclusive Growth or Inclusive Development
- In recent years, inclusive growth or inclusive
development approach is becoming important. It is
partly influenced by HD approach - This approach indicates that growth has improved
significantly but only few sections benefited.
Inclusive growth or development approach
indicates that all sections of society should be
benefited. - For example, inclusive approach says we should
focus on divides rural-urban, social divides,
regional disparities etc. - It advocates focus on agriculture, poverty and
employment, social sector, regional and other
disparities. Also non-income indicators and
freedoms should be improved for all the sections
rather than few.
36Inclusive Growth
- International organizations also have advocated
policies which are different from Washington
Concensus - UNICEF (adjustment with human face), UNDP (HD
approach), ILO (decent work) - World Banks World Development Report (2000/01)
also talks about growth with equity (on human
capital - Some governments have been following inclusive
growth approach. For example, Indias 11th Five
Year Plan advocates this approach. As part of
this government has been following rights
approach (right to employment, right to
education, right to food, right to information)
37Social Security in HD perspective
- Social security in developing countries is
considered much wider than that in developed
countries. - In developed countries, it is only protective
type of care arrangements to take care of
contingencies. - In Developing countries, poor and workers suffer
from two sets of problems (a) capability
deprivation (b) the second one is adversity, no
fallback mechanism to meet contingencies such as
ill health, accident, death and old age. - Following HD perspective, social security is
divided into (a) basic social security to cover
capability deprivation and (b) contingent social
security to take care of risks or adversities
38Critique or problems HD approach
- Conceptually capability and HD approaches are
good. But, difficult to measure freedoms
political and data problems. How to
operationalise HD and capability approaches is a
problem. - Some say that it is abstract construction. For
operationalizing three things are needed. - -- First, Sens distinction between simple and
complex functioning is too watertight. In real
life, there is mutual interdependence between
them . This is not recognized. - -- Second, Sens formulation of capability
approach focuses exclusively on the individual,
ignoring the collective i.e. voice of an
organised community.
39Critique or problems in HD
- Third, capability approachs articulation of
democracy focuses at national level. What matters
genuine participation is local participation and
deep democratic decentralization. - Human Development Index (HDI) has limitations.
- The high profile of the HDI has sometimes led to
its misuse or misinterpretation. - Ironically, the success of HDI only reinforced
narrow interpretation of HD approach. - Two flaws in the initial design of HDI the
simplification of complex idea and exclusion of
references to political freedoms and
participation.
40Critique or problems in HD
- Despite careful efforts to explain that the
notion of human development is broader than its
index, the message has not reached people. - Message has to reach that HD approach is broader
than education and health because human
capabilities extend well beyond these areas. - The index does not capture all dimensions of HD
- It may not always be true that the quality of
peoples lives have improved when HDI increased.
It is possible that political repression, crime,
pollution and racial discrimination may be on the
rise even HDI values move upward. - It does not capture important capabilities
political freedoms, personal security and
participation
41Conclusion
- Articulating development as a widening of
choices, an expansion of freedoms and a
fulfillment of human rights gives it a distinct
edge over the approaches of economic growth,
basic needs, human capital or human resource
development and social development. - Human development, human capabilities and human
rights approaches are complementary to each
other. - By bringing into sharp focus issues of
deprivation and inequality, human development
puts people and among them, the most deprived
at the centre of development interventions.
42Conclusion
- Embedded in the concept is a firm commitment to
democracy, human rights, participation and a deep
respect for the environment. - Inspite of several efforts, there is still
confusion about the human development approach.
The message has to be conveyed frequently.
43