Tuesday, December 9, 2025
ADVT 
International

Princeton Professor Angus Deaton Wins Nobel Prize For Measuring Poverty In India

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Oct, 2015 11:32 AM
    Nobel Prize winner Angus Deaton's current research focuses on the determinants of health in rich and poor countries as well as on the measurement of poverty in India and around the world.
     
    The British-born Princeton University professor has been awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize in economics for his contributions to understanding consumption at the individual level and in aggregate.
     
    Deaton, who also maintains a longstanding interest in the analysis of household surveys, noted that his focus on individuals and their decisions is important both from an academic and ethical standpoint, according to a report on the university website.
     
    "In the end, it's individual peoples' well-being that counts," he was quoted as saying. "When you're counting the poverty rate in India or the mortality rate in the United States, all of those things you're looking at are aggregates."
     
    "But it's one death at a time. It's one person at a time who's in poverty," Deaton said. "It's their lives that are being led. In the end, I don't think you're ever going to want to get away from the individual."
     
    Deaton's latest book, "The Great Escape: Health, Wealth and the Origins of Inequality" (Princeton University Press), explores the story of how, beginning 250 years ago, some parts of the world sustained progress, opening up gaps and setting the state for today's unequal world.
     
    He's also widely known for publications on the relationship between income and happiness, with Kahneman.
     
    In announcing Deaton's prize, the Nobel committee also specifically noted Deaton's 1980 paper, with John Muellbauer, "An Almost Ideal Demand System," which details a way to provide a reliable picture of demand patterns in society.
     
    At a news conference in Princeton Monday afternoon, Deaton noted the tremendous progress that has been made in conditions around the world.
     
    "I've spent a lot of time arguing the world is getting to be a much better place," Deaton said.
     
    "Over the past 200 years, the world has been transformed from something close to destitution to where many, many of us have much richer lives in which our talents and capabilities can be more fully expressed. I do tend to emphasise there's more to be done."
     
    Deaton, a native of the United Kingdom, earned his bachelor's degree and PhD from Cambridge University. He taught at Cambridge and the University of Bristol before joining the faculty at Princeton in 1983

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Bobby Jindal Warns Of Immigrant 'Invasion'

    Republican presidential candidate Bobby Jindal, son of immigrant parents from India, says that immigrants who do not adopt American values represent an "invasion".

    Bobby Jindal Warns Of Immigrant 'Invasion'

    Rainy Deluge Hits B.C.'s Parched South Coast, But Barely A Drop For The Interior

    Rainy Deluge Hits B.C.'s Parched South Coast, But Barely A Drop For The Interior
    A powerful storm is forecast to dump as much as 120 millimetres of rain over Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley, Howe Sound, Whistler, the Sunshine Coast and most of Vancouver Island.

    Rainy Deluge Hits B.C.'s Parched South Coast, But Barely A Drop For The Interior

    Indian-American Baby Sitter Kinjal Patel To Serve 14 Years For Toddler's Death In Her Care

    Indian-American Baby Sitter Kinjal Patel To Serve 14 Years For Toddler's Death In Her Care
    Patel was found guilty by court for the death of Athiyan Sivakumar, who was 19-months-old when he died at Yale-New Haven Hospital on January 19, 2014

    Indian-American Baby Sitter Kinjal Patel To Serve 14 Years For Toddler's Death In Her Care

    Indian Labourer Jailed For Molesting Woman In Dubai

    Indian Labourer Jailed For Molesting Woman In Dubai
    The 27-year-old man was accused of groping a 35-year-old woman from Philippines in an inebriated state.

    Indian Labourer Jailed For Molesting Woman In Dubai

    Canadian Fighter Pilots Accused Of Killing Civilians In An Air Strike In Iraq

    Canadian Fighter Pilots Accused Of Killing Civilians In An Air Strike In Iraq
    The Globe and Mail says Canadian fighter pilots have been accused of killing civilians in a January air strike in Iraq, though it's unclear who is making the allegation.

    Canadian Fighter Pilots Accused Of Killing Civilians In An Air Strike In Iraq

    Indian Media In New Zealand In Soup Over 'Witch Doctor' Ads

      Thakur Ranjit Singh filed the complaint, on behalf of the Indian Media Watch New Zealand, over ads placed in various newspapers

    Indian Media In New Zealand In Soup Over 'Witch Doctor' Ads