Sri Lanka Ending Poverty and Promoting Shared Prosperity : A Systematic Country Diagnostic

Sri Lanka is in many respects a development success story. With economic growth averaging more than 7 percent a year over the past five years on top of an average growth of 6 percent the preceding five years, Sri Lanka has made notable strides towa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
OIL
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25895855/sri-lanka-ending-poverty-promoting-shared-prosperity
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23957
id okr-10986-23957
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic TARIFFS
SOCIAL COSTS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES
FISH
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
DURABLE GOODS
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGES
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
AIR QUALITY
WASTE MANAGEMENT
CARBON
EXPECTATIONS
PRODUCERS
RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
PROPERTY RIGHTS
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
TIMBER
LABOR FORCE
EMISSIONS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
REVENUES
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
INCENTIVES
EQUILIBRIUM
MODELS
PRIVATE PROPERTY
REAL WAGES
AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY
EXPLOITATION
ARABLE LAND
LABOR COSTS
CROWDING OUT
OIL
TRADEOFFS
CROP MIX
NATURAL CAPITAL
CAPITAL FORMATION
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
OPTIONS
DEBT
LAND DEGRADATION
POLLUTION
FORESTRY
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFERS
ECONOMIC POLICIES
DIVIDENDS
NATURAL RESOURCES
METALS
SUBSIDIES
EFFICIENCY
FISHING
TAXES
TAX REFORMS
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
LAND USE
RESOURCES
NATURAL MONOPOLIES
UNEMPLOYMENT
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
EQUITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
CONSUMPTION
SOCIAL PARTICIPATION
ECONOMIC IMPACT
RURAL COMMUNITIES
WAGES
CLIMATE CHANGE
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
POLICY MAKERS
CREDIT
QUALITY STANDARDS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
PURCHASING POWER
DEFORESTATION
DEMAND
PATENTS
MINES
SOLID WASTES
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
AGGREGATE DEMAND
MARGINAL COSTS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
ALTERNATIVE TAX REFORMS
EXPENDITURES
PROPERTY
TAX RATES
OPPORTUNITY COSTS
TRANSACTION COSTS
ENVIRONMENT
SOIL DEGRADATION
STREAMS
ECONOMICS
TAX REVENUE
CAPITAL GOODS
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
FISHERIES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
TRADE
LAND
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
TRANSFER PAYMENTS
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
INCENTIVE SYSTEMS
DRINKING WATER
TRADE TAXES
CONSUMPTION PATTERNS
COMMERCIAL BANKS
ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES
COAL
FARMS
WATER POLLUTION
REVENUE
PRIVATE CONSUMPTION
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT
RISK MANAGEMENT
TAX REFORM
PROFITS
ENVIRONMENTAL
COST SAVINGS
LABOR MARKETS
DEMOGRAPHICS
PRICES
CONSUMER PROTECTION
PRODUCTION COSTS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIES
PRODUCTION PROCESSES
PUBLIC GOODS
COMPETITION
spellingShingle TARIFFS
SOCIAL COSTS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES
FISH
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
DURABLE GOODS
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGES
POLICY ENVIRONMENT
AIR QUALITY
WASTE MANAGEMENT
CARBON
EXPECTATIONS
PRODUCERS
RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
PROPERTY RIGHTS
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
TIMBER
LABOR FORCE
EMISSIONS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
REVENUES
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
INCENTIVES
EQUILIBRIUM
MODELS
PRIVATE PROPERTY
REAL WAGES
AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY
EXPLOITATION
ARABLE LAND
LABOR COSTS
CROWDING OUT
OIL
TRADEOFFS
CROP MIX
NATURAL CAPITAL
CAPITAL FORMATION
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
OPTIONS
DEBT
LAND DEGRADATION
POLLUTION
FORESTRY
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFERS
ECONOMIC POLICIES
DIVIDENDS
NATURAL RESOURCES
METALS
SUBSIDIES
EFFICIENCY
FISHING
TAXES
TAX REFORMS
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
LAND USE
RESOURCES
NATURAL MONOPOLIES
UNEMPLOYMENT
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
EQUITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
CONSUMPTION
SOCIAL PARTICIPATION
ECONOMIC IMPACT
RURAL COMMUNITIES
WAGES
CLIMATE CHANGE
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
POLICY MAKERS
CREDIT
QUALITY STANDARDS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
PURCHASING POWER
DEFORESTATION
DEMAND
PATENTS
MINES
SOLID WASTES
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
AGGREGATE DEMAND
MARGINAL COSTS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
ALTERNATIVE TAX REFORMS
EXPENDITURES
PROPERTY
TAX RATES
OPPORTUNITY COSTS
TRANSACTION COSTS
ENVIRONMENT
SOIL DEGRADATION
STREAMS
ECONOMICS
TAX REVENUE
CAPITAL GOODS
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
FISHERIES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
TRADE
LAND
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
TRANSFER PAYMENTS
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
INCENTIVE SYSTEMS
DRINKING WATER
TRADE TAXES
CONSUMPTION PATTERNS
COMMERCIAL BANKS
ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES
COAL
FARMS
WATER POLLUTION
REVENUE
PRIVATE CONSUMPTION
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT
RISK MANAGEMENT
TAX REFORM
PROFITS
ENVIRONMENTAL
COST SAVINGS
LABOR MARKETS
DEMOGRAPHICS
PRICES
CONSUMER PROTECTION
PRODUCTION COSTS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIES
PRODUCTION PROCESSES
PUBLIC GOODS
COMPETITION
World Bank Group
Sri Lanka Ending Poverty and Promoting Shared Prosperity : A Systematic Country Diagnostic
geographic_facet South Asia
Sri Lanka
description Sri Lanka is in many respects a development success story. With economic growth averaging more than 7 percent a year over the past five years on top of an average growth of 6 percent the preceding five years, Sri Lanka has made notable strides towards the goals of ending extreme poverty and promoting shared prosperity (the ‘twin goals’). The national poverty headcount rate declined from 22.7 to 6.7 percent between 2002 and 2012/13, while consumption per capita of the bottom 40 percent grew at 3.3 percent a year, compared to 2.8 percent for the total population. Other human development indicators are also impressive by regional and lower middle-income country standards. Sri Lanka has also succeeded in ending decades of internal conflict in 2009 and steps have been taken towards reconciliation. Sri Lanka’s has had impressive development gains but there are strong indications that drivers of past progress are not sustainable. Solid economic growth, strong poverty reduction, overcoming internal conflict, effecting a remarkable democratic transition in recent months, and overall strong human development outcomes are a track record that would make any country proud. However, the country’s inward looking growth model based on non-tradable sectors and domestic demand amplified by public investment cannot be expected to lead to sustained inclusive growth going forward. A systematic diagnostic points to fiscal, competitiveness, and inclusion challenges as well as cross-cutting governance and sustainability challenges as priority areas of focus for sustaining progress in ending poverty and promoting shared prosperity.
format Report
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Sri Lanka Ending Poverty and Promoting Shared Prosperity : A Systematic Country Diagnostic
title_short Sri Lanka Ending Poverty and Promoting Shared Prosperity : A Systematic Country Diagnostic
title_full Sri Lanka Ending Poverty and Promoting Shared Prosperity : A Systematic Country Diagnostic
title_fullStr Sri Lanka Ending Poverty and Promoting Shared Prosperity : A Systematic Country Diagnostic
title_full_unstemmed Sri Lanka Ending Poverty and Promoting Shared Prosperity : A Systematic Country Diagnostic
title_sort sri lanka ending poverty and promoting shared prosperity : a systematic country diagnostic
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25895855/sri-lanka-ending-poverty-promoting-shared-prosperity
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23957
_version_ 1764455268390797312
spelling okr-10986-239572021-05-25T08:46:54Z Sri Lanka Ending Poverty and Promoting Shared Prosperity : A Systematic Country Diagnostic World Bank Group TARIFFS SOCIAL COSTS CAPITAL MARKETS CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES FISH UNEMPLOYMENT RATES DURABLE GOODS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES ECONOMIC GROWTH ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGES POLICY ENVIRONMENT AIR QUALITY WASTE MANAGEMENT CARBON EXPECTATIONS PRODUCERS RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PROPERTY RIGHTS BALANCE OF PAYMENTS FINANCIAL RESOURCES TIMBER LABOR FORCE EMISSIONS POLITICAL ECONOMY REVENUES ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES INCENTIVES EQUILIBRIUM MODELS PRIVATE PROPERTY REAL WAGES AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY EXPLOITATION ARABLE LAND LABOR COSTS CROWDING OUT OIL TRADEOFFS CROP MIX NATURAL CAPITAL CAPITAL FORMATION LABOR PRODUCTIVITY OPTIONS DEBT LAND DEGRADATION POLLUTION FORESTRY TECHNOLOGY TRANSFERS ECONOMIC POLICIES DIVIDENDS NATURAL RESOURCES METALS SUBSIDIES EFFICIENCY FISHING TAXES TAX REFORMS ACCESS TO INFORMATION LAND USE RESOURCES NATURAL MONOPOLIES UNEMPLOYMENT ENERGY CONSUMPTION DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION EQUITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH CONSUMPTION SOCIAL PARTICIPATION ECONOMIC IMPACT RURAL COMMUNITIES WAGES CLIMATE CHANGE ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT POLICY MAKERS CREDIT QUALITY STANDARDS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS PURCHASING POWER DEFORESTATION DEMAND PATENTS MINES SOLID WASTES SUSTAINABLE GROWTH AGGREGATE DEMAND MARGINAL COSTS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES ELECTRICITY GENERATION ALTERNATIVE TAX REFORMS EXPENDITURES PROPERTY TAX RATES OPPORTUNITY COSTS TRANSACTION COSTS ENVIRONMENT SOIL DEGRADATION STREAMS ECONOMICS TAX REVENUE CAPITAL GOODS ENERGY EFFICIENCY FISHERIES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT TRADE LAND ECONOMIES OF SCALE TRANSFER PAYMENTS COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS INCENTIVE SYSTEMS DRINKING WATER TRADE TAXES CONSUMPTION PATTERNS COMMERCIAL BANKS ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES COAL FARMS WATER POLLUTION REVENUE PRIVATE CONSUMPTION HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RISK MANAGEMENT TAX REFORM PROFITS ENVIRONMENTAL COST SAVINGS LABOR MARKETS DEMOGRAPHICS PRICES CONSUMER PROTECTION PRODUCTION COSTS ECONOMIC CONDITIONS ECONOMIES PRODUCTION PROCESSES PUBLIC GOODS COMPETITION Sri Lanka is in many respects a development success story. With economic growth averaging more than 7 percent a year over the past five years on top of an average growth of 6 percent the preceding five years, Sri Lanka has made notable strides towards the goals of ending extreme poverty and promoting shared prosperity (the ‘twin goals’). The national poverty headcount rate declined from 22.7 to 6.7 percent between 2002 and 2012/13, while consumption per capita of the bottom 40 percent grew at 3.3 percent a year, compared to 2.8 percent for the total population. Other human development indicators are also impressive by regional and lower middle-income country standards. Sri Lanka has also succeeded in ending decades of internal conflict in 2009 and steps have been taken towards reconciliation. Sri Lanka’s has had impressive development gains but there are strong indications that drivers of past progress are not sustainable. Solid economic growth, strong poverty reduction, overcoming internal conflict, effecting a remarkable democratic transition in recent months, and overall strong human development outcomes are a track record that would make any country proud. However, the country’s inward looking growth model based on non-tradable sectors and domestic demand amplified by public investment cannot be expected to lead to sustained inclusive growth going forward. A systematic diagnostic points to fiscal, competitiveness, and inclusion challenges as well as cross-cutting governance and sustainability challenges as priority areas of focus for sustaining progress in ending poverty and promoting shared prosperity. 2016-03-15T18:14:30Z 2016-03-15T18:14:30Z 2016-02-01 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25895855/sri-lanka-ending-poverty-promoting-shared-prosperity http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23957 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Country Focus Country Focus :: Systematic Country Diagnostic South Asia Sri Lanka