Using Feedback Loops for Policy-making
Contours of the Public Policy in India in the Amrit Kaal is an An Online International Autumn School Program, A One-Month Immersive Online Intermediate Certificate Training Course
Tripta Behera is a Visiting Researcher and Assistant Editor at IMPRI Impact and Policy Research Institute, New Delhi. She completed her Bachelor’s in Economics from the Shri Ram College of Commerce, University of Delhi; and is set to begin her Master’s degree in Economics in the fall of 2023 at the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning (CESP), Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU). Her academic interests revolve around the intersection of economics with crucial societal domains such as sustainability, gender, education, and health. She firmly believes that economics can serve as a powerful tool to address some of the most pressing challenges faced by communities around the world.
Research Areas
Agriculture, Food, Nutrition Security and Rural Development, Economy and Infrastructure, Entrepreneurship, ICT and Innovation, Environment, Energy, Climate Change and Sustainable Development, Gender, Pluralism and Social Inclusion, Public Finances and Macroeconomics, Social Sector
Centres
Contours of the Public Policy in India in the Amrit Kaal is an An Online International Autumn School Program, A One-Month Immersive Online Intermediate Certificate Training Course
Session ReportMohd Ali Siddiqi An online International Summer School Program on “Data, Monitoring and Evaluation” is a two-month immersive online hands-on certificate training
The real world has a way of confounding textbook economics. Macroeconomics, the branch that deals with the big things like growth, inflation and interest rates, seems broken whe
Transport is an integral part of the energy system, and the demand for transport has been ever-increasing with the increase in population. One of the main causes of climate change
INDIA’S per capita income, representing the average income of an Indian citizen, has risen from INR 79,000 in 2013–14 to INR 1,71,000 in 2022–23 — an increase of 116 per
Indian cities with their contribution of around two-thirds of the GDP are expected to play an instrumental role as the country’s ‘engines of economic growth'. The union budget
The fiscal deficit created now translates into a higher debt burden that future generations have to service. Is that fair? It is more than fair. In the misty mornings of peak winte
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