Famines have presented a persistent challenge to economic thought, provoking debates over the importance of aggregate food availability and the role of markets and governments in allocating limited food. This study of the economics of famine applies some modern methods of economic investigation to such issues, showing how the sharp increases in mortality observed during famines can arise without a decline in aggregate food availability, and how the markets' use of information about future scarcity is crucial to their performance during a famine. Including a detailed empirical investigation of the 1974 famine in Bangladesh, this book sheds new light on the way markets work during famines and on the effects of policies aimed at famine relief or prevention.
Format:Paperback
Language:English
ISBN:0198287275
ISBN13:9780198287278
Release Date:March 1990
Publisher:Oxford University Press, USA
Length:216 Pages
Weight:0.65 lbs.
Dimensions:0.7" x 5.5" x 8.4"
Recommended
Format: Paperback
Condition: New
$51.38
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