Professor S Subramanian
S Subramanian is Former Professor, Madras Institute of Devel-opment Studies (MIDS). He has been awarded a post-retirement, two-year National Fellowship by the Indian Council of Social Science Research (ICSSR). An elected Fellow of the Human Development and Capability Association (HDCA), Subramanian has worked extensively on measurement and other aspects of poverty, inequality, and demography, and on topics in collective choice theory, welfare economics and development economics. His work has...See more
S Subramanian is Former Professor, Madras Institute of Devel-opment Studies (MIDS). He has been awarded a post-retirement, two-year National Fellowship by the Indian Council of Social Science Research (ICSSR). An elected Fellow of the Human Development and Capability Association (HDCA), Subramanian has worked extensively on measurement and other aspects of poverty, inequality, and demography, and on topics in collective choice theory, welfare economics and development economics. His work has been published in journals such as Journal of Develop-ment Economics, Economics and Philosophy, Social Choice and Welfare, and Theory and Decision. He is the recipient (along with his co-author) of the 2001 Dudley Seers Memorial Prize awarded to the best article published in the Journal of Development Studies.An established scholar in poverty and inequality, he has edited/authored the following titles: Themes in Development Economics Essays in Honour of Malcolm Adiseshiah, New Delhi. Measurement of Inequality and Poverty (Readers in Economics Series), New Delhi. Illfare in India: Essays on India s Social Sector in Honour of S. Guhan (with Barbara Harriss-White), Delhi: SAGE Publications, 1999. India s Development Experience: Selected Writings of S. Guhan, New Delhi. Rights, Deprivation, and Disparity: Essays in Concepts and Measurement (Collected Essays Series), New Delhi. Poverty, Inequality, and Population Essays in Development and Applied Measurement (with D. Jayaraj), New Delhi. (paperback edition: 2012). The Poverty Line (Oxford India Short Introductions Series), New Delhi. See less