Research Update
The latest SLOTS polling for June 2024 shows that four in five (79%) Sri Lankans continue to say that the country is heading in the wrong direction, while only 4% said it was on the right track.
Public views about whether the country is headed in the right direction or not have remained negative since SLOTS started polling this in early 2022. But after improving initially, views have become more negative since July 2023. This is due to a steady decline in uncommitted respondents since the numbers who think the country is in the right direction have remained below 5%.
Sri Lankans are more likely to think the country is headed in the wrong direction than in any other country where this is polled. In May-June 2024, a global average of 62% of adults polled by IPSOS in 29 countries thought their country was headed in the wrong direction compared with 97% in Sri Lanka1.
These negative views are widely held, with little difference by gender, income level, urban and rural areas, voting preferences, and people’s views of Aragalaya. But younger Sri Lankans have been increasingly more likely than older adults to say the country is on the wrong track.
Methodology
Question wording
SLOTS polls the public’s outlook on the overall direction of the country by asking people: “Would you say things in the country are headed in the right direction or the wrong direction?”. Respondents are also allowed not to answer or to say they “Don’t know” or are “Not sure”. The percentages saying the country is moving in the right or wrong directions is based on all those who were interviewed, so numbers for right and wrong tracks will not sum to 100% because of don’t knows and refusals.
The SLOTS right direction/wrong direction question wording follows that of well-regarded national surveys in other countries, including Ipsos and Morning Consult. An alternative approach is to ask people if they are “satisfied” with the way things are going in the country, which is the approach used by Gallup, Pew, and others. Data from the United States show that these two alternative measures usually track each other closely, but there have been short periods when they differ. The commonest reason appears to be partisan differences in how the public views the government’s ability to manage current problems.2
Weighting
SLOTS uses a hybrid sample of an existing national panel that was recruited face-to-face in 2019 and a sample of respondents reached by random-digit dialling (RDD) of mobile numbers. To minimize sample bias, estimates are based on weighting respondents to match the national population for age, sex, sector, ethnicity, religion, education, socioeconomic status ranking, and geographical location. Weighting is done by propensity weighting and iterative proportional fitting (raking).
Technical notes
Recommended citation
Institute for Health Policy, July 2024, “79% of Sri Lankans think the country is heading in the wrong direction”. Available at: https://ihp.lk/research-updates/79-sri-lankans-think-country-heading-wrong-direction