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The title of this book does not really do it justice -- at least not from the perspective of a medical reviewer. It is not a polemic about the haves and the have-nots, nor is it composed of emotion-laden anecdotes about the human suffering that is so often associated with destitution. Instead, Dasgupta contrasts the positive qualities of well-being with the negative qualities that are the result of destitution, and he provides a comprehensive and in-depth analysis, in the most sophisticated economic terms, of the costs of destitution, poverty, and the deprivation that inevitably results, not only for those who
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