From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka

As the American polymath W. Edwards Deming once famously said, “In God we trust; all others bring data.” Unfortunately, bringing data and evidence to policy deliberations has not always been the norm in Sri Lanka’s recent political history. From 2022 to the present, the country experienced the worst...

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Autores principales: Headey, Derek D., van Asselt, Joanna, Ecker, Olivier, Balié, Jean
Formato: Blog Post
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169578
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author Headey, Derek D.
van Asselt, Joanna
Ecker, Olivier
Balié, Jean
author_browse Balié, Jean
Ecker, Olivier
Headey, Derek D.
van Asselt, Joanna
author_facet Headey, Derek D.
van Asselt, Joanna
Ecker, Olivier
Balié, Jean
author_sort Headey, Derek D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description As the American polymath W. Edwards Deming once famously said, “In God we trust; all others bring data.” Unfortunately, bringing data and evidence to policy deliberations has not always been the norm in Sri Lanka’s recent political history. From 2022 to the present, the country experienced the worst economic crisis since its independence—a crisis precipitated by policy decisions made without consideration of rigorous evidence or sound economic advice, including escalating government debt, depletion of foreign reserves, and a disastrous fertilizer import ban. Since late 2022, a bailout package by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and policy reforms have steadied Sri Lanka’s macroeconomy, though the ordinary citizen remains far poorer than she was before the crisis. The arrival of a new government in late 2024 led by the reform-minded National People’s Power (NPP) party offers a promising opportunity for policymakers and researchers to contribute much more to rebuilding the Sri Lankan economy. A key new resource for those efforts is the BRIGHT (Building Resilience, Inclusive Growth, and Holistic Transformation) survey.
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spelling CGSpace1695782025-02-19T13:51:01Z From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka Headey, Derek D. van Asselt, Joanna Ecker, Olivier Balié, Jean policies data surveys poverty social safety nets livelihoods As the American polymath W. Edwards Deming once famously said, “In God we trust; all others bring data.” Unfortunately, bringing data and evidence to policy deliberations has not always been the norm in Sri Lanka’s recent political history. From 2022 to the present, the country experienced the worst economic crisis since its independence—a crisis precipitated by policy decisions made without consideration of rigorous evidence or sound economic advice, including escalating government debt, depletion of foreign reserves, and a disastrous fertilizer import ban. Since late 2022, a bailout package by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and policy reforms have steadied Sri Lanka’s macroeconomy, though the ordinary citizen remains far poorer than she was before the crisis. The arrival of a new government in late 2024 led by the reform-minded National People’s Power (NPP) party offers a promising opportunity for policymakers and researchers to contribute much more to rebuilding the Sri Lankan economy. A key new resource for those efforts is the BRIGHT (Building Resilience, Inclusive Growth, and Holistic Transformation) survey. 2024-12-20 2025-01-21T17:16:56Z 2025-01-21T17:16:56Z Blog Post https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169578 en Open Access International Food Policy Research Institute Headey, Derek; van Asselt, Joanna; Ecker, Olivier; and Balié, Jean. 2024. From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka. Blog post. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://www.ifpri.org/blog/from-crisis-to-recovery-how-cgiars-bright-survey-can-catalyze-evidence-based-policy-reforms-in-sri-lanka/
spellingShingle policies
data
surveys
poverty
social safety nets
livelihoods
Headey, Derek D.
van Asselt, Joanna
Ecker, Olivier
Balié, Jean
From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka
title From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka
title_full From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka
title_fullStr From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka
title_short From crisis to recovery: How CGIAR’s BRIGHT Survey can catalyze evidence-based policy reforms in Sri Lanka
title_sort from crisis to recovery how cgiar s bright survey can catalyze evidence based policy reforms in sri lanka
topic policies
data
surveys
poverty
social safety nets
livelihoods
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169578
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