The Demand for Disadvantage
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- Jean-Marie Baland & Rohini Somanathan & Lore Vandewalle, 2019.
"Socially Disadvantaged Groups and Microfinance in India,"
Economic Development and Cultural Change, University of Chicago Press, vol. 67(3), pages 537-569.
- Jean-Marie Baland & Rohini Somanathan & Lore Vandewalle, 2011. "Socially Disadvantaged Groups and Microfinance in India," Working Papers 1117, University of Namur, Department of Economics.
- Jean-Marie Baland & Rohini Somanathan & Lore Vandewalle, 2017. "Socially Disadvantaged Groups and Micro-finance in India," Working Papers id:12201, eSocialSciences.
- Jean-Marie Baland & Rohini Somanathan & Lore Vandewalle, 2017. "Socially Disadvantaged Groups and Microfinance in India," Working papers 278, Centre for Development Economics, Delhi School of Economics.
- Somanathan, Rohini & Baland, Jean-Marie & ,, 2015. "Socially Disadvantaged Groups and Microfinance in India," CEPR Discussion Papers 10944, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers.
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Keywords
Shapley value; potential; consistency; games in partition function form.Goup-based policies of preferential treatment began under British rule in the first half of the twentieth century. After political independence in 1947; the Indian constitution converting some of these policies into rights; facilitated the expansion of state-led affirmative action. The constitution was unusual in that it juxtaposed provisions for the equality of all citizens before the law with those that mandated the proportional political representation of specific groups and allowed the state to make special concessions for their advancement. In the decades that followed; these provisions did dilute the dominance of the traditionally elite in political and social life but also generated caste-based contests for the rents from public office and the gains from spending on public goods. Mandated political representation and other types of affirmative action changed the balance of power but also created new types of inequalities within the set of targeted communities. Demographic data from the census; public employment and college admission records; and studies of electoral outcomes all suggest that the minimally disadvantaged and the numerically strong communities benefitted more than the others. The constitutional space given to affirmative action was initially valuable because it encouraged the state to acknowledge its responsibility towards the socially marginalized. Over time however; it has created a peculiar discourse of social justice and development in India in which individual advancement is linked to group mobility and groups move forward by claiming that they have been left behind. In the process; the state has neglected less controversial and more fundamental rights such as the universal access to primary and secondary education that may have done more for larger numbers of truly disadvantaged communities. Section 2 describes the constitutional basis for affirmative action policies in India and provides a brief history of these policies. Section 3 presents secondary evidence on the characteristics of beneficiaries and the distribution of benefits. It also documents the inequality in educational attainment that emerged within the set of communities that were targeted as recipient of affirmative action over the 1931-1991 period. I conclude in Section 4 with reflections on the divergence between the intended and actual effects of affirmative action in India.;All these keywords.
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