Development means expansion of choices in Amartya Sen’s ‘capabilities approach’
Amartya Sen's Capabilities Approach: Development as Expansion of Choices
UPSC Study Note | GS-I / GS-II / GS-IV | Prelims + Mains
1. At a Glance
- Amartya Sen (Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences, 1998) reconceptualised development not as GDP growth but as expansion of substantive human freedoms and choices. [S1][S4]
- Capabilities in Sen's framework = the real, substantive freedoms people have to live lives they have reason to value — distinct from the layperson's use of the word "skill." [S2][S3]
- UPSC relevance: cuts across GS-I (social thinkers), GS-II (governance/rights-based approach), GS-IV (ethics of development); foundational to HDI, UNDP Human Development Reports, and India's own welfare policy debates.
- The approach directly underpins the Human Development Index (HDI), which UNDP has published annually since 1990. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- Article published in The Hindu International Supplement (Print Edition), 10 March 2026, by L. N. Venkataraman, situating Sen's capabilities approach in the context of post-truth politics and AI-driven erosion of critical thinking — raising questions about democratic freedom as a capability. [S5]
- The piece argues that if citizens lose the ability to reason critically (due to AI/misinformation), a core capability underlying democratic life is itself under threat — applying Sen's framework to a contemporary governance crisis.
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1970s–80s | Sen develops welfare economics critique; argues GNP-centric metrics miss human deprivation |
| 1979 | Sen's Tanner Lectures: Equality of What? — introduces capabilities as the metric of equality |
| 1985 | Commodities and Capabilities published; formal articulation of functionings vs. capabilities |
| 1990 | Sen collaborates with Mahbub ul Haq (Pakistani economist); first Human Development Report published by UNDP; HDI launched |
| 1992 | Inequality Re-examined — Sen extends the framework to justice |
| 1998 | Sen awarded Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences |
| 1999 | Development as Freedom published — most accessible full statement of the approach |
| 2000s | Martha Nussbaum (philosopher) develops a parallel central capabilities list approach; Sen explicitly diverges, rejecting a fixed universal list as potentially paternalistic |
| 2010 | UNDP introduces Inequality-Adjusted HDI (IHDI) and Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) — both rooted in the capabilities framework |
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions
- Capabilities: The real opportunities (substantive freedoms) a person has to achieve functionings — what they can be and do. [S2]
- Functionings: Actual achievements — e.g., being well-nourished, educated, politically participating. Functioning = achievement; capability = ability to achieve. [S3]
- Conversion factors: Personal, social, and environmental variables that translate resources (commodities) into actual capabilities.
- Agency: Sen stresses individuals as agents of their own development, not passive recipients of welfare.
- Positive vs. Negative Freedom: Capabilities map to positive freedom (real ability to do X), not merely the absence of prohibition.
Key Distinction Sen vs. Nussbaum
| Dimension | Sen | Nussbaum |
|---|---|---|
| Central list of capabilities | Rejects (fears paternalism) | Endorses (10-item list anchored in human dignity) |
| Framework | Open, deliberative, democracy-dependent | Comprehensive theory of justice with threshold |
| Philosophical base | Liberal political economy | Neo-Aristotelian, dignity-centred |
Institutional Linkages
- UNDP Human Development Report: Annual since 1990; explicitly grounded in Sen–Haq framework [S1]
- Human Development Index (HDI): Three dimensions — health (life expectancy), education (mean + expected years of schooling), income (GNI per capita) [S1]
- IHDI (Inequality-Adjusted HDI): Discounts for within-country inequality
- MPI (Multidimensional Poverty Index): Developed by Sabina Alkire & James Foster; operationalises Sen's multidimensional deprivation idea [S4]
- Nobel Prize: Economics, 1998, "for his contributions to welfare economics"
Key Texts
- Commodities and Capabilities (1985)
- Inequality Re-examined (1992)
- Development as Freedom (1999)
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Challenges GDP-centrism: per capita income growth does not automatically translate into improved capabilities (e.g., high-growth states with poor health/education outcomes). [S1]
- Sen's framework shifted international development finance toward human capital investment (health, education) rather than infrastructure alone.
- Informed World Bank and IMF conditionality debates — shifting emphasis toward social sector spending.
Social
- Capabilities approach is inherently intersectional: gender, caste, disability, and ethnicity are conversion factors that determine whether formal freedoms become real ones. [S2]
- Explains why women's empowerment and social equality are development ends, not merely means — a person choosing to fast is different from one who starves due to poverty (the choice–compulsion distinction). [S2]
- Foundation for rights-based approach to development adopted by India's welfare schemes (MGNREGS, RTI, RTE, NFSA).
Legal / Constitutional
- Sen's framework aligns with Article 21 (right to life with dignity) interpreted expansively by Indian courts to include livelihood, health, education.
- Informs debates around Directive Principles (Articles 36–51) as capability-enabling obligations of the state.
- Justification for positive rights — state has an affirmative duty to create capability-enabling conditions.
Ethical / Governance
- Sen's agency concept critiques paternalistic welfarism — development must expand what people can choose, not just what the state provides.
- In the context of the 2026 article: AI and post-truth politics threaten the capability of critical reasoning — a meta-capability underpinning all democratic choices. [S5]
- Raises accountability questions: if citizens cannot critically evaluate governance due to AI-manipulated information ecosystems, the procedural basis of democracy (a capability in itself) is undermined.
Historical
- Predecessor frameworks: Utilitarian welfare economics (maximise aggregate utility) and Rawlsian primary goods — both critiqued by Sen for ignoring interpersonal variation in converting resources to well-being.
- Influenced by Aristotle's eudaimonia (human flourishing) via Nussbaum's parallel work.
- Marks a shift from the Washington Consensus (1980s structural adjustment, GDP-focus) to the Post-Washington Consensus (human development, social capital).
Administrative
- India's Planning Commission → NITI Aayog transition reflects partial internalisation: NITI Aayog's SDG India Index and Health Index operationalise multi-dimensional development tracking.
- Bottleneck: India's state capacity gap — constitutional guarantees (capabilities on paper) often not translated into real functionings due to delivery failures.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- March 2026: The Hindu supplement article (L. N. Venkataraman) explicitly applies Sen's capabilities framework to the AI and post-truth challenge — arguing erosion of critical thinking skills = erosion of a core democratic capability. [S5]
- 2025: UNDP Human Development Report 2025 continues to use HDI and MPI as primary global measures, both rooted in Sen's framework. [S1]
- 2024–25: India's debates on Universal Basic Income (UBI) draw on capabilities arguments — income alone insufficient without complementary capabilities (health, literacy).
- 2025: Growing policy discourse on "digital capabilities" as a new dimension — access to meaningful internet use as a 21st-century capability, linking to Digital India outcomes.
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- Amartya Sen received the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in 1998 — for contributions to welfare economics, not for the capabilities approach specifically as a prize category.
- Sen's capabilities approach defines development as expansion of substantive freedoms, not increase in GNI.
- Sen collaborated with Mahbub ul Haq (Pakistani economist) to develop the foundational ideas behind the Human Development Index (HDI). [S1]
- The first Human Development Report was published by UNDP in 1990. [S1]
- HDI measures three dimensions: health (life expectancy), education (mean + expected years of schooling), and standard of living (GNI per capita). [S1]
- Functionings = actual achievements (being, doing); Capabilities = real opportunities to achieve those functionings. [S3]
- Sen rejected a fixed universal list of capabilities, unlike Martha Nussbaum who proposed a 10-capability central list grounded in human dignity. [S2][S5]
- Sen's framework distinguishes between choosing not to eat (fast) and being unable to eat (poverty) — the same outcome has different capability implications. [S2]
- The Inequality-Adjusted HDI (IHDI) and Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) are UNDP measures that operationalise Sen's multi-dimensional deprivation concept. [S4]
- Sen's key book articulating the approach for a general audience: Development as Freedom (1999).
- The capabilities approach critiques both utilitarian welfare economics and Rawlsian primary goods as inadequate metrics for human well-being.
- "Conversion factors" in Sen's framework = personal, social, and environmental variables that determine whether resources translate into real capabilities.
- UNDP has adopted the capability approach in its HDI and annual Human Development Reports since 1990. [S1]
- Sen's framework underpins the rights-based approach in Indian welfare legislation: MGNREGS (2005), RTE Act (2009), NFSA (2013).
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-I | Role and influence of social thinkers; Indian society and social change |
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development; welfare schemes; rights-based approaches |
| GS-IV | Ethics in human actions; concepts of human dignity; philosophical underpinnings of public policy |
Plausible Mains Question Stems
- "Amartya Sen's capabilities approach offers a more comprehensive framework for measuring development than GDP. Critically examine with reference to India's welfare architecture." (GS-II / GS-I)
- "In an era of artificial intelligence and post-truth politics, how does Sen's concept of 'capability' as substantive freedom reframe our understanding of democratic governance?" (GS-IV / GS-II)
- "Distinguish between Sen's open-ended capabilities framework and Nussbaum's central capabilities list. Which approach is more suitable for India's pluralistic society?" (GS-IV / GS-I)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Human Development Index (HDI) & UNDP Reports | Direct institutional output of Sen–Haq collaboration |
| Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) | Operationalises Sen's multi-dimensional deprivation concept; NITI Aayog uses India-specific MPI |
| Rights-Based Approach to Development | MGNREGS, RTE, NFSA all embed capability logic — right to work/education/food as capability-enabling entitlements |
| Martha Nussbaum's Capabilities List | Philosophical counterpart; often tested alongside Sen in ethics/philosophy questions |
| John Rawls — Theory of Justice | Sen explicitly critiques Rawlsian primary goods; understanding both clarifies Sen's distinctiveness |
| Washington Consensus vs. Post-Washington Consensus | Historical policy context: Sen's approach emerged partly as a critique of structural adjustment's GDP-centrism |
| Digital Divide & Digital India | Contemporary application: digital access as a 21st-century capability |
| AI Ethics & Democratic Governance | 2026 news hook: AI eroding critical-reasoning capability — a live application of Sen's framework |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Capabilities ≠ Skills/Talents: In everyday English, "capability" means skill; in Sen's framework it means substantive freedom to achieve a functioning. Examiners exploit this conflation.
- Sen did NOT prescribe a fixed list: Only Nussbaum proposed the central 10-capability list. Sen deliberately avoided one. Attributing Nussbaum's list to Sen is a frequent error.
- HDI ≠ GDP per capita: HDI uses GNI per capita (one of three components), not GDP. Also, the education dimension uses both mean and expected years of schooling — not literacy rate alone (the old measure, changed in 2010).
- Nobel Prize year confusion: Sen won in 1998, not 1999 (when Development as Freedom was published). The book and the prize are in consecutive years — easy to swap.
- Mahbub ul Haq's nationality: He was Pakistani, not Indian. The Sen–Haq collaboration is a notable India-Pakistan intellectual partnership — examiners have tested Haq's nationality.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Human development | Human Development Reports" — https://hdr.undp.org/about/human-development — (Tier 2: UNDP)
- [S2] "2016 UNDP Human Development Report THINK PIECE (Capabilities Approach)" — https://hdr.undp.org/system/files/documents/osmanitemplate.pdf — (Tier 2: UNDP)
- [S3] "Human Development Report 2006 Occasional Paper — Capabilities vs Functionings" — https://hdr.undp.org/system/files/documents/mehtalrev.pdf — (Tier 2: UNDP)
- [S4] "Development as capability expansion / Amartya Sen" — https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/75128 — (Tier 2: UN Digital Library)
- [S5] L. N. Venkataraman, "Development means expansion of choices in Amartya Sen's 'capabilities approach'" — The Hindu, 10 March 2026, International Supplement, Page 11 — (Tier 4: thehindu.com)