Povery-less society: the humanistic approach in the 21 century

By: Manjula LaxmanMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Jaipur Rawat pub 2022Description: 200 pISBN: 9788131612767Subject(s): povertyDDC classification: 339.46091724 Summary: This book explores humanistic economic ways to understand poverty. Mainstream economics has focused on market-oriented economies which have no place for the poor due to lack of financial resources. The basic problem is that mainstream economics has marginalized ethics in economics. The utilitarian approach estimates the poor by the incapability to access goods and services in the market. The author argues that the mainstream economics utilitarian approach cannot eradicate poverty, because it deals with poverty as a monetary incapability to access the market. Poverty or low monetary capability is related to human justice, liberty, and equity issues, in a broad perspective, related to social (society, political system) economic, and ethical issues in the economies. Capitalism or socialism are extreme politico-economic institutions which have failed to remove inequality in the world. In order to remove poverty in the 21st century, we need to readdress the issue from humanist point of view. Humanistic economics can focus more on human happiness and harmony with nature which can create egalitarian world order. Monetary achievements of the economy are not sufficient but non-monetary aspects make human life more flourishing. The author has involved the humanistic economic model that how the institutional arrangement can be connected with each other, this model emphasizes that we need to minimize market-oriented institutions and expand the alternative market institutions which are more human-centric, and play an important role in the removal of inequality and poverty among different groups, society, and the nation. This research agenda on poverty-less society addresses the new alternative ways to understand poverty and inequality in the world by normative framework.
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This book explores humanistic economic ways to understand poverty. Mainstream economics has focused on market-oriented economies which have no place for the poor due to lack of financial resources. The basic problem is that mainstream economics has marginalized ethics in economics. The utilitarian approach estimates the poor by the incapability to access goods and services in the market. The author argues that the mainstream economics utilitarian approach cannot eradicate poverty, because it deals with poverty as a monetary incapability to access the market. Poverty or low monetary capability is related to human justice, liberty, and equity issues, in a broad perspective, related to social (society, political system) economic, and ethical issues in the economies.
Capitalism or socialism are extreme politico-economic institutions which have failed to remove inequality in the world. In order to remove poverty in the 21st century, we need to readdress the issue from humanist point of view. Humanistic economics can focus more on human happiness and harmony with nature which can create egalitarian world order. Monetary achievements of the economy are not sufficient but non-monetary aspects make human life more flourishing. The author has involved the humanistic economic model that how the institutional arrangement can be connected with each other, this model emphasizes that we need to minimize market-oriented institutions and expand the alternative market institutions which are more human-centric, and play an important role in the removal of inequality and poverty among different groups, society, and the nation. This research agenda on poverty-less society addresses the new alternative ways to understand poverty and inequality in the world by normative framework.

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