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Capabilities: Theory

Capabilities: Theory. James Foster George Washington University and OPHI, Oxford. Guide. Formalization 28 29 30. Motivation. What is wellbeing? What is the “right” space for evaluating inequalities? Sen’s Answer Functionings Beings and doings that people value and have reason to value

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Capabilities: Theory

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  1. Capabilities: Theory James Foster George Washington University and OPHI, Oxford

  2. Guide Formalization 28 29 30

  3. Motivation What is wellbeing? What is the “right” space for evaluating inequalities? Sen’s Answer FunctioningsBeings and doings that people value and have reason to value Capabilities The collection of functionings available to people

  4. Motivation Examples of functionings Being adequately nourished Being free from avoidable disease Being able to take part in the life of the community Having self-respect If can represent each functioning by a continuous variable Have following graph from Foster and Sen 1997

  5. Motivation Capability set and functioning vectors

  6. Motivation Note the distinction between functionings and capabilities: Capabilities reflect one’s freedom to choose valuable alternatives; what “could be” Independent of person’s preferences or choice rule Functionings reflect “what is” The current achievements of the person Which may have much or very little to say about other alternatives (now or in the future) Ex: Fasting is different from starving in capability, not functioning

  7. Motivation Note also that functionings and capabilities (and the associated freedoms) are Ends desirable in themselves Means instrumental for other ends and means Ex Being healthy is an end in itself and it helps to achieve other ends and means Social interaction is an end in itself and it helps to achieve other ends and means

  8. Motivation Wait a minute – why not just use income? Easy to understand Easy to measure Single dimensional Comparable across people Underlies most evaluations of wellbeing Fungible and policy relevant

  9. Motivation Sen’s answer Means, not an end Aristotle: “The life of money-making is one undertaken under compulsion, and wealth is evidently not the good we are seeking, for it is merely useful and for the sake of something else” Nicomachean Ethics The conversion of means to ends varies dramatically across persons and groups of persons Two persons with the same incomemay have very different levels of wellbeing if one is very disabled.

  10. Motivation “The real opportunities that different persons enjoy are very substantially influenced by variations of individual circumstances (e.g., age, disability, proneness to illness, special talents, gender, maternity) and also by disparities in the natural and the social environment (e.g., epidemiological conditions, extent of pollution, prevalence of local crime). Under these circumstances, an exclusive concentration on inequalities in income distribution cannot be adequate for an understanding of economic inequality” Foster and Sen (1997) Goodbye to the anonymity axiom of income inequality comparisons Hello multidimensional inequality (and poverty and wellbeing analysis)?

  11. Motivation Why not utility? Not cardinally measurable No basis of comparison across persons Subject to adaptation and other variations “That’s to say like if you got a cold you take a shot of malaria” John Birch Paranoid Blues Bob Dylan Why not the commodity bundle (or budget set)? Means, and subject to very different conversion functions However useful analogy to functioning vector and capability set

  12. Motivation There may be other reasons for using functionings and capabilities Many key functionings are almost stocks (analogous to human capital) May be influenced by current conditions But largely reflect past investments And may be more predictive of future prospects Especially for children The “pre-distribution” set

  13. Motivation One could argue that this is the shape of the newest version of welfare economics Regularly invoked by Deaton, Heckman, Atkinson, Stiglitz,… Although Sen regards the capability approach first as framework for thought, second as a critique of other approaches to welfare evaluation, and only third as a method of making interpersonal comparisons of welfareRobeyns (2000) Consequently, let’s dive in. Problem Like Sen’s Nobel winning work on Social Choice There are two versions of the same theory – one verbal-descriptive the other formal-symbolic Need both

  14. Plan Review the capability approach Origins Definitions Implications Explore two extensions External capabilities Freedom as flexibility Discuss applications Poverty Robustness Capability creation

  15. Origins The capability approach can trace its origins through the ages and across many countries Let’s have a quick look round Sources Basu and Lopez Calva (2011) Alkire (2013)

  16. Origins Aristotle Politics and Nicomachean Ethics What should be the aim of public policy? To provide the conditions that enable people to have a flourishing life (cf: Bhutan’s GNH) These conditions help produce the capabilities, or the possibilities of “functioning in certain human ways” Which ways? Nutrition, growth, and other biological ways Exercising choice and practical reason Participating in the political life, etc. What is “the good”? Where all are able to flourish Eudaimonia (or makarios) Egalitarian in space of capabilities

  17. Origins Marx and Engels Define a commendable human life: Material (biological)needs are satisfied Eating, drinking, dwelling, clothing Human needs (to exercise reasoning) are satisfied Correspond to functionings A liberated society requires freedom in both spheres Enhanced opportunities in material dimensions “It is not possible to free men if they cannot be assured access to food, drink, housing, and good quality-clothing” Freedom to choose “…make it possible for me to do one thing to-day and another tomorrow, to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening, criticize after dinner, just as I have in mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, shepherd or critic.” Corresponding to capabilities. “Freedom to” rather than “freedom from” Berlin

  18. Origins Smith While discussing commodity taxation, defining which commodities are necessaries and which are luxuries Emphasizes the instrumental use of commodities in satisfying material and social needs By necessaries I understand not only the commodities which are indispensably necessary for the support of life, but whatever the custom of the country renders it indecent for creditable people, even of the lowest order, to be without. A linen shirt, for example, is, strictly speaking, not a necessary of life. The Greeks and Romans lived, I suppose, very comfortably though they had no linen. But in the present times, through the greater part of Europe, a creditable day-labourer would be ashamed to appear in public without a linen shirt, the want of which would be supposed to denote that disgraceful degree of poverty which, it is presumed, nobody can well fall into without extreme bad conduct.

  19. Origins Smith (Continued) Custom, in the same manner, has rendered leather shoes a necessary of life in England. The poorest creditable person of either sex would be ashamed to appear in public without them. In Scotland, custom has rendered them a necessary of life to the lowest order of men; but not to the same order of women, who may, without any discredit, walk about barefooted. In France they are necessaries neither to men nor to women, the lowest rank of both sexes appearing there publicly, without any discredit, sometimes in wooden shoes, and sometimes barefooted. Under necessaries, therefore, I comprehend not only those things which nature, but those things which the established rules of decency have rendered necessary to the lowest rank of people.

  20. Origins Smith If commodities are instrumental, what are the ends? Human functionings Including usual basic ones like having enough to eat, having adequate shelter But also social interaction, dignity and participation in the life of the community Implications: See “Poor, Relatively Speaking” by Sen

  21. Origins Sen 1980 “Equality of What” Capabilities, given diversity of people 1983 “Poor,Relatively Speaking” Absolute poverty standard in capabilities 1984 Commodities and Capabilities Brief and clear presentation of CA 1992 Inequality Re-examined Summary of work in context of inequality and poverty – any theory of justice requires equality in some space – argues for capabilities as the right space given the diversity of people

  22. Origins Sen 1993 Quality of Life (with Nussbaum) outcome of WIDER project (philosophers and economists) 1999 Development as Freedom synthesis following Nobel 2009 The Idea of Justice goes beyond capability approach to discuss principles of justice and processes Theme: Approach was parallel to and grew out of applied and policy work: 70’s Basic needs approach, 80’s growth should be people based, or focused on human ends, 90’s annual thematic Human Development Reports by UNDP

  23. Origins Nussbaum 1990 “Aristotelian Social Democracy” 1993 Quality of Life (Edited with Sen) 1995 Women Culture and Development 2000 Women and Human Development: The Capabilities Approach 2011 Creating Capabilities Many other authors

  24. Origins Nussbaum Includes list of categories of capabilities 1. Life: not dying prematurely 2. Bodily health: good health; adequately nourished; shelter 3. Bodily integrity; mobility; free from violence; choice in sex and reproduction 4. Senses, imagination, and thought: education, religion, art 5. Emotions: attachments, love 6. Practical reason: form conception of the good, planning of life 7. Affiliation: social interaction; respect and dignity 8. Other species: concern and relation to animals, plants, nature 9. Play: laugh, play, enjoy recreational activities 10. Control over one’s environment: political participation; property, employment.

  25. Origins Sen Produces no list (reasons) Critique Unfinished theory (Romer, Blume) Sen would argue flexible This interpretation is empirically validated – many, many papers are using the approach Sen would agree that the capability approach is not a complete theory of justice Partial and incremental

  26. Capability Approach: Description We begin with a verbal and graphical description of the capability approach Sources Alkire (2013) Foster and Sen (1997) Sen (1999) Foster and Handy (2008) Basu and Lopez Calva (2011)

  27. Description What is it? Sen’s capability approach is a moral(evaluative, or normative) framework that proposes that social arrangements should be primarily evaluated according to the extent of freedom people have to promote or achieve functionings they value. Theme In many of Sen’s writings, the language is not entirely self evident; much of understanding Sen is understanding why the specific language is used.

  28. Description Capability • the various combinations of functionings (beings and doings) that the person can achieve. [It] is, thus, a set of vectors of functionings, reflecting the person’s freedom to lead one type of life or another...to choose from possible livings. (Inequality Re-examined) • Analogous to a budget set

  29. Description Capability • “The focus here is on the freedom that a person actually has to do this or be that – things that he or she may value doing or being.” Idea of Justice 232 • Alkire: All formulations of capability have two parts: freedom and valuable beings and doings (functionings). Sen’s key contribution has been to unite the two concepts.

  30. Description Functionings The various things a person may value and have reason to value doing or being • Intuitive abstract but understandable • intrinsically valuable to the person not just instrumental • intrinsic value (have reason to value) broccoli • so avoids adaptive preferences on further reflection would not value • ‘doings and beings’ is our focal space the space of human lives

  31. Description Functionings Examples Resources Capability Functionings Utility • Bike Able to Ride around Cool ride around • Food Able to be Nourished Cool nourished Key Allows for different conversion factors

  32. Description Robeyn’s (2005) schematic (with social influences)

  33. Description Freedom “the real opportunity that we have to accomplish what we value” “The ‘good life’ is partly a life of genuine choice, and not one in which the person is forced into a particular life – however rich it might be in other respects.” It is authentic self-direction – the ability to shape one’s own destiny as a person and a part of various communities.

  34. Description Freedom Not a ‘paper’ freedom: it has to be effective freedom, a realpossibility. Not maximization of choices without regard to their quality and people’s values “Indeed sometimes more freedom of choice can bemuse and befuddle, and make one’s life more wretched.” Not necessarily direct control by an individual , groups, states, etc can increase freedoms by public action and investment.

  35. Description Freedom has two aspects Process Aspect: Ability to act on behalf of what matters(agency) Institutions, movements, democratic practice as well as each person’s agency Opportunity Aspect: Real opportunity to achieve valued functionings, selected from among various good possibilities. (capability)

  36. Description Agency “…what a person is free to do and achieve in pursuit of whatever goals or values he or she regards as important.” “…someone who acts and brings about change, and whose achievements can be judged in terms of her own values and objectives, whether or not we assess them in terms of some external criteria as well” agency is the person’s ability to act on what they value and have reason to value.

  37. Description Agency and Capability “The approach … is essentially a ‘people-centered’ approach, which puts human agency (rather than organizations such as markets or governments) at the centre of the stage. The crucial role of social opportunities is to expand the realm of human agency and freedom, both as an end in itself and as a means of further expansion of freedom. The word ‘social’ in the expression ‘social opportunity’ (…) is a useful reminder not to view individuals and their opportunities in isolated terms. The options that a person has depend greatly on relations with others and on what the state and other institutions do. We shall be particularly concerned with those opportunities that are strongly influenced by social circumstances and public policy…” (Drèze & Sen 2002 page 6).

  38. Description • General Features • Interactions: Ends and means • Outside market solutions • Encourages investments • Focus on freedoms • Multidimensional and complex

  39. Description Misunderstandings • The breadth goes well beyond health and education • It is deliberately incomplete – it has to be operationalized differently in different contexts • Individualism (is ethical not methodological) • Evaluativevs Prospective analysis. It can evaluate activities, or guide policy to create choices. • Not all multidimensional analyses are capability analyses • Many don’t consider freedom/agency, intrinsic value, capabilities not resources, and the process of public debate etc. • Hard to measure freedom, to consider counterfactual options • What they could have chosen but didn’t

  40. Capability Approach: Formalization The approach has been formalized by Sen and others We now take a quick look at this version and its implications Sources Sen (commodities and capabilities) Foster and Sen (1997) Basu and Lopez Calva (2011)

  41. Formalization Notation xiis a vector of commodities for person i c(xi) is the vector of characteristics from xi Gorman or Lancaster fi is i’s personal utilization function Converting vector of characteristics into vector of functionings Note: Sen assumes is a choice; we will assume given bi = fi(c(xi)) is i’s vector of functionings Xi is the set of vectors of commodities are feasible for i Qi = { bi such that bi = fi(c(xi)) for some xiin Xi} Note Many other formalizations possible (social influences, etc)

  42. Formalization • Motivates interesting empirical issues • Links across deprivations • Motivated work on head start • Education impact health? • Key

  43. Practical Considerations Sen suggested that his capability approach could be applied to evaluate circumstances However, he was not especially clear how to do so Let’s briefly explore some practical barriers to using this approach Sources Foster and Sen Sen Development as Freedom Foster, MacGillivray, Seth “Robustness” Allison and Foster

  44. Practical Considerations Is the theory implementable? Review of Inequality Re-examined Main question Do you have a feasible implementation? An example where the approach can be applied and makes a difference How to measure capabilities, functionings, freedom?

  45. Practical Considerations The challenge of measuring freedoms Freedom has two elements Agency and empowerment Broadly configured in Sen’s work Usually more narrowly confined to personal agency Opportunity Range of real opportunities Both are difficult to infer from observed choices Without asking, how are we to know the conditions under which a choice was made? Without asking, how are we to know the choices that were not taken?

  46. Practical Considerations Data on agency? OPHI questionnaires Subjective assessments Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index (discussed later) Questions on inclusion in decision making

  47. Practical Considerations Data on opportunities? Recall budget set Income and prices are all that is needed to infer the shape and size of a economic opportunity set Capability sets Can observe functionings But how do we know the shape and size of a capability set? Direct questions Inference (need models) Analogous to inferring treatment effect Observations over time Ramadan vs ordinary time

  48. Practical Considerations Measuring Opportunity Freedom Several lines of thought in literature (mostly over abstract sets) Traditional indirect utility valuation Sen’s “elementary” evaluation No value for unchosen options Pattanaikand Xu Counting approach Axiomatically derived But depends on inability to discern the relative quality of options Basically assumes options have value without explaining why

  49. Practical Considerations Measuring Opportunity Freedom Kreps (1979), Foster(1993, 2010), Arrow (1995) Provide answer to why “unchosen” options have value Freedom as flexibility Good choices for every contingency A kind of options value Discussed at greater length below

  50. Practical Considerations How to measure achieved functionings? Why important? They miss out on freedom, but: Functionings describe what is, not what could be The real conditions people are experiencing Whether due to their own choice or imposed Whether a result of an irrational choice mechanism or mistakes Agency and opportunity (freedom) also matter, but taking stock of functionings is very relevant. Most applications of the capability approach do this

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