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Angus Deaton has dug into obscure data to explore a range of problems: The scope of poverty in India. How poor countries treat young girls. The link between income inequality and economic growth.

The Princeton University economist's research has raised doubts about sweeping solutions to poverty and about the effectiveness of aid programs. And on Monday, it earned him the Nobel prize in economics.

For work that the award committee said has had "immense importance for human welfare, not least in poor countries," Deaton, 69, will receive a prize of about $975,000 from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

He becomes the sixth scholar affiliated with Princeton to win the Nobel in economics since it was first given in 1969.

"That lightning would strike me seemed like a very small probability event," Deaton said at a news conference at Princeton. "There are many people who are worthy of this award."

Deaton grew up in a family of modest means. "Not having money can give you a perspective on the world that you don't get other ways," he said. "Most people in my family thought I should be out [working] in the fields, not reading books. Fortunately, my father didn't think that way."

Deaton was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, and holds dual U.S. and British citizenship.

Deaton created tools that let governments in poor countries study how families adjust spending in response to, say, an increase in the sales tax on food.

Deaton discovered that India had far more poor people in rural areas than previously thought, a finding that led the government to expand subsidies.

"Households that were not defined as poor before can now be reached," said Ingvild Almas, associate professor at the Norwegian School of Economics. "That is a direct result of Deaton's research."

He also hit upon what the Nobel committee called an ingenious way to discover whether families in poor countries spent less to care for daughters than for sons. Among other things, he studied how much households spent on "adult" items, such as beer and cigarettes, to see whether families consumed things differently depending on the sex of newborn children. His surprising conclusion: They didn't.

Another Deaton study challenged the once-popular notion that malnutrition caused poverty by making people too weak to find work. He found the relationship worked the other way: Being poor caused people to be malnourished.

In his 2013 book, "The Great Escape," Deaton expressed skepticism about the effectiveness of international aid programs in addressing poverty. He noted, for example, that China and India have lifted tens of millions of people out of poverty despite receiving relatively little aid money. Yet at the same time, poverty has remained entrenched in many African countries that have received substantial sums.

Deaton's book drew criticism from Bill Gates, who runs a foundation dedicated to fighting global poverty. The billionaire founder of Microsoft found Deaton's critique of aid programs too broad.

"If this is the only thing you read about aid, you will come away very confused about what aid does for people," Gates wrote on his blog last year.

Deaton has criticized the widening income gap between rich and poor in the U.S. But he has not become a darling of anti-inequality activists the way another Nobel-winning economist, Columbia University's Joseph Stiglitz, has.

In "The Great Escape," he wrote that "inequality can sometimes be helpful" in promoting prosperity by giving people incentives to work harder and more efficiently. But last year Deaton wrote that he worried that high-paying jobs in finance and other fields were diverting talented young people from "more worthwhile pursuits."

He also warned that the very rich might be using their disproportionate influence to "write the rules in their favor."