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


2. Why in the News


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

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

Key Texts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Historical

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. 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.
  2. Sen's capabilities approach defines development as expansion of substantive freedoms, not increase in GNI.
  3. Sen collaborated with Mahbub ul Haq (Pakistani economist) to develop the foundational ideas behind the Human Development Index (HDI). [S1]
  4. The first Human Development Report was published by UNDP in 1990. [S1]
  5. HDI measures three dimensions: health (life expectancy), education (mean + expected years of schooling), and standard of living (GNI per capita). [S1]
  6. Functionings = actual achievements (being, doing); Capabilities = real opportunities to achieve those functionings. [S3]
  7. Sen rejected a fixed universal list of capabilities, unlike Martha Nussbaum who proposed a 10-capability central list grounded in human dignity. [S2][S5]
  8. Sen's framework distinguishes between choosing not to eat (fast) and being unable to eat (poverty) — the same outcome has different capability implications. [S2]
  9. The Inequality-Adjusted HDI (IHDI) and Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) are UNDP measures that operationalise Sen's multi-dimensional deprivation concept. [S4]
  10. Sen's key book articulating the approach for a general audience: Development as Freedom (1999).
  11. The capabilities approach critiques both utilitarian welfare economics and Rawlsian primary goods as inadequate metrics for human well-being.
  12. "Conversion factors" in Sen's framework = personal, social, and environmental variables that determine whether resources translate into real capabilities.
  13. UNDP has adopted the capability approach in its HDI and annual Human Development Reports since 1990. [S1]
  14. 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

  1. "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)
  2. "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)
  3. "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

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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).
  4. 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.
  5. 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