Sanjay G. Reddy Explained
Sanjay G Reddy is a noted Harvard (and Cambridge) educated development economist. He is a Professor and former Chair of the Department of Economics at The New School for Social Research at New York in the US.[1] [2] His work has covered a wide range of topics including: Inequality; Governance of International Trade and Finance; Social Protection in the Global Context; and Democracy, Technocracy and Learning to Learn (with Charles Sabel).
He is an elected fellow of the Human Development and Capabilities Association.[3]
Selected publications
- Reddy, S. G., & Pogge, T. W. (2002). How not to count the poor! A reply to Ravallion. Debates on the Measurement of Global Poverty, 42–85.
- Reddy, Sanjay G. and Thomas Pogge (2009) How Not to Count the Poor, Initiative for Policy Dialogue Working Paper Series, May 2009
- Reddy, S. G. (1996). Claims to expert knowledge and the subversion of democracy: the triumph of risk over uncertainty. Economy and society, 25(2), 222–254.
- Minoiu, C., & Reddy, S. G. (2010). Development aid and economic growth: A positive long-run relation. The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, 50(1), 27–39.
- Reddy, S. G. (2012). Randomise this! On poor economics. Review of Agrarian Studies, 2(2).
External links
His private page: https://sanjayreddy.org/
Notes and References
- https://www.newschool.edu/nssr/faculty/sanjay-reddy/
- https://sanjayreddy.org/about/
- https://hd-ca.org/about/hdca-fellows