Loading AI tools
Belgian-Indian economist (born 1959) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jean Drèze (born 22 January 1959) is a Belgian-born Indian[1] welfare economist, social scientist and activist.[2][3] He has worked on several developmental issues facing India like social welfare, poverty and gender inequality.
This biographical article is written like a résumé. (April 2024) |
Jean Drèze | |
---|---|
Born | |
Citizenship | Belgian (till 2002) Indian (2002-present) |
Relatives | Jacques Drèze (father) |
Academic career | |
Field | Development economics |
Alma mater | University of Essex (BA) Indian Statistical Institute (PhD) |
Influences | Amartya Sen |
His co-authors include Nobel laureate in economics Amartya Sen, with whom he has written on famine, Nicholas Stern, with whom he has written on policy reform when market prices are distorted,[4] and Nobel laureate in economics Angus Deaton.[5] He is currently an honorary professor at the Delhi School of Economics,[6] visiting professor at the Department of Economics, Ranchi University, and also the member of Economic Advisory Council to the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu headed by the Nobel laureate Esther Duflo.[7] He was a member of the National Advisory Council of India in both the terms of the UPA government, but only for a year in the first and two in the second.[8][9]
Jean Drèze was born on 22 January 1959 in Leuven, Belgium. He is the son of Jacques Drèze who founded of the Center for Operations Research and Econometrics at the Université catholique de Louvain.[10][11] His brother, Xavier Drèze, is a marketing and consumer research scholar.[12]
He studied mathematical economics at the University of Essex in the 1980s and did his PhD (theoretical economics of cost-benefit analysis) at the Indian Statistical Institute, New Delhi.[13]
He has lived in India since 1979 and became an Indian citizen in 2002, which meant renouncing Belgian citzenship.
He was based in Delhi (1993 to 2002) and in Allahabad (2002 to 2014). He currently lives in Ranchi.
Drèze taught at the London School of Economics in the 1980s, his only full-time post, and at the Delhi School of Economics, and had been Visiting Professor at the G.B. Pant Social Science Institute, Allahabad. He was Honorary Chair Professor of the "Planning and Development Unit" created by the Planning Commission, Government of India, in the Department of Economics, University of Allahabad, India. He has made wide-ranging contributions to development economics and public economics, with special reference to India.
He has made significant contributions to the field of development economics, focusing on various critical issues such as hunger, famine, education, gender inequality, childcare, school feeding, and employment guarantee.[14][15] His approach to research combines conventional economic methods, as seen in his insightful articles addressing poverty in India, with methodologies commonly employed by anthropologists.
One notable example of his interdisciplinary work is his collaboration with Nicholas Stern, Peter Lanjouw, and other researchers in studying the village of Palanpur in the Moradabad District of Uttar Pradesh, India. For this study, he immersed himself in the village, living under the same conditions as the local population. This involved farming a plot of land and raising animals, an experience that he recounted alongside Naresh Sharma in their article "Sharecropping in a North Indian Village" published in the Journal of Development Studies in October 1996.[16]
By combining extensive fieldwork with qualitative analysis of everyday life and poverty, complemented by quantitative research, his work stands out in the field of economics.[citation needed] He brings a unique perspective to his research, leveraging his rich fieldwork experiences along with his analytical work.[17]
A key work widely cited that Dreze worked on as part of a small team was the primary education study of key states in northern India typically referred to by its short name, The PROBE Report, or The Public Report on Basic Education (1999). It remains a key reference due to the lack of similarly comprehensive studies using grassroots development specialists.[citation needed]
Drèze is well known for his commitment to social justice, both in India and internationally.[18] During and after his PhD in India, he adopted a lifestyle of voluntary simplicity.[19] While in the LSE, he frequently slept rough and lived with homeless squatters, helping to start a squatters movement in 1988 that opened buildings to the homeless and defied eviction.[19] He wrote a short book about this movement and the life of the homeless in London, called No. 1 Clapham Road: the diary of a squat.[20] Dreze is known for refusing luxury and, while doing fieldwork, lives and works in the same conditions as his respondents.[21] In Delhi he and his wife Bela Bhatia had a one-room house in a jhuggi.[19]
Apart from academic work he has been actively involved in many social movements including the peace movement, the Right to Information campaign that led to the Right to Information Act in India, the Right to Food campaign in India,[22] among others.
During the 1990–1991 Iraq War, he joined a peace camp stationed on the Iraq-Saudi border. His 1992 article with Haris Gazdar, "Hunger and Poverty in Iraq, 1991", was one of the first assessments of Iraq's economy after the Gulf War, and an early warning about the potential human costs of the Iraq sanctions. Another book that came out of Iraq is War and Peace in the Gulf, edited by Bela Bhatia, Jean Dreze and Kathy Kelly.[23]
Books
Articles
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.