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Synthesizing the Malthusian and Senian approaches on scarcity: a realist account
[Revisiting the entitlement approach to famine: taking a closer look at the supply factor—a critical survey of the literature]

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  • Adel Daoud

Abstract

Food entitlement decline (FED) and food availability decline (FAD) are two approaches to explaining famines that have different policy implications. One focuses on the systemic level, whereas the other is concerned with the individual level. They therefore analyse relatively distinct causal mechanisms. Thus, an important question is whether these approaches can be reconciled. Another related question is how FAD- and FED-based explanations relate to classical Malthusian views about rapid food requirement increase (FRI). This paper analyses these questions and argues that these three approaches can indeed be reconciled within a single framework by outlining the causal sources of FAD, FED and FRI. This task requires, among other things, the separation of ontological categories and empirical measures. As a consequence of this argument, the paper suggests that there are only seven possible ontological combinations of how a famine situation can arise as a direct cause. Simultaneously, it maintains that there are virtually an infinite number of ways in which these combinations may act as indirect causes (rooted in economic, political and social conditions). The analysis is exemplified by the Bengal famine of 1943 because that famine is a well-known case. The wider research and policy applicability of this general account are discussed but have yet to be tested in relation to other scarcity cases (water, land, fish). This synthesis is made possible by the incorporation of critical realist interventions into economic theory.

Suggested Citation

  • Adel Daoud, 2018. "Synthesizing the Malthusian and Senian approaches on scarcity: a realist account [Revisiting the entitlement approach to famine: taking a closer look at the supply factor—a critical survey of the l," Cambridge Journal of Economics, Cambridge Political Economy Society, vol. 42(2), pages 453-476.
  • Handle: RePEc:oup:cambje:v:42:y:2018:i:2:p:453-476.
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10.1093/cje/bew071
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    Cited by:

    1. Bowbrick, Peter, 2022. "Entitlement and food availability decline (FAD) – the use of fraud and abuse in famine economics," MPRA Paper 115133, University Library of Munich, Germany.
    2. Bowbrick, Peter, 2020. "Toxic famine research and how it suppresses its critics," MPRA Paper 101970, University Library of Munich, Germany.

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