Vijayendra Rao
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bijurao.bsky.social
Vijayendra Rao
@bijurao.bsky.social
World Bank-Development Research Group(personal account). CIFAR, @cgdev.org. Economist who mixes disciplines and methods. Hindustani music. https://www.vijayendrarao.org/
For sure. I plan to spend a lot of time
In Bangalore
October 21, 2025 at 9:02 PM
This next phase is a continuation of what has always driven me — curiosity about how people create meaning and agency in their lives, and how social science can better honor, and practice, that complexity.

Grateful for the journey — and excited for what’s next.
October 20, 2025 at 3:42 PM
I’ve been privileged to collaborate with extraordinary colleagues and partners in villages, governments, and research teams across the world — and to help build conversations between disciplines, and between people who don’t often speak to one another.
October 20, 2025 at 3:42 PM
When I joined the Bank in 1999, I never imagined how much the institution — and I — would evolve. Working in the Bank’s research department has given me the freedom to explore how culture, politics, and economics intertwine in shaping people’s lives.
October 20, 2025 at 3:42 PM
I will continuing my affiliations with CIFAR’s Boundaries, Membership & Belonging program and as a Non-Resident Fellow at the Center for Global Development.
October 20, 2025 at 3:42 PM
I’ll be leaving the Bank effectively on December 15, 2025 (with my official departure on June 30, 2026) to make more time for independent research, writing, and teaching. From March to June 2026, I’ll be Distinguished Scholar-Practitioner in Residence at Northwestern University’s Buffet Institute.
October 20, 2025 at 3:42 PM
Our study is the first predominantly qualitative paper accepted in The World Bank Economic Review.

It makes the case for listening carefully to what people say—especially when the numbers look good.

📄 Read it here: documents.worldbank.org/en/publicati...
Is There an Underside to Economic Growth ? A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Malaysia
This paper sheds light on a Malaysian paradox that may have lessons for the rest of the world. Despite high gross domestic product growth with concurrent sharp reductions .
documents.worldbank.org
July 28, 2025 at 3:09 PM
Three key takeaways for development policy:
1️⃣ Growth is not enough.
2️⃣ We need to protect people from the market’s vagaries.
3️⃣ Reconnecting economic and social life is critical—especially amid rising populism.
July 28, 2025 at 3:09 PM
Quantitative indicators—like GDP or consumption surveys—often miss this underside.

Open-ended conversations reveal the lived experiences and emotional undercurrents that data alone can’t capture.
July 28, 2025 at 3:09 PM
This is what Hirsch meant by “social congestion”:

More money doesn’t buy better lives when education, housing, health, and leisure become rationed by class, and social networks fragment under economic strain.
July 28, 2025 at 3:09 PM
Drawing on Karl Polanyi and Hirsch, we argue that economic growth can fracture the social fabric.

It prioritizes individual mobility over collective well-being—leading to anomie, congestion, and declining access to formerly free public goods.
July 28, 2025 at 3:09 PM
Strikingly, the less developed western regions expressed less discontent.

There, people seemed more attuned to relative rather than absolute income—and less affected by what Fred Hirsch called “positional competition.”
July 28, 2025 at 3:09 PM
We conducted 56 open-ended focus group interviews across Malaysia.

What we heard:
▪️ “Imbalance” between income & living costs
▪️ Reliance on multiple jobs
▪️ Rising debt
▪️ Stress & social disconnection
▪️ Ethnic polarization
July 28, 2025 at 3:09 PM
Malaysia is often hailed as a success story of the “East Asian Miracle”:
✔️ High growth
✔️ Sharp poverty reduction
✔️ Falling inequality

But what do people themselves say about this progress?
July 28, 2025 at 3:09 PM
😂
July 16, 2025 at 5:27 PM
Given that high quality codes are necessary in order to assess whether an LLM introduces bias, we argue that it may be preferable to train a bespoke model on a subset of transcripts coded by trained sociologists rather than use an LLM.
May 27, 2025 at 10:30 AM
We find that using LLMs to annotate and code text can introduce bias that can lead to misleading inferences. By bias we mean that the errors that LLMs make in coding interview transcripts are not random with respect to the characteristics of the interview subjects.
May 27, 2025 at 10:30 AM
We ask whether LLMs can help code and analyse large-N qualitative data from open-ended interviews, with an application to transcripts of interviews with Rohingya refugees and their Bengali hosts in Bangladesh.
May 27, 2025 at 10:30 AM