Options for Self-reliant Resurgence: CPD’s Rapid Assessment of Flood 2004

    Flood 2004 (2005)The 2004 flood in Bangladesh will be remembered because of the rapidity with which it struck, and the severity of the damages that it inflicted upon the people and the economy of the country. Addressing the negative fallouts of flood 2004 continues to remain a concern at the household level in the affected areas, as well as for the policymakers and development practitioners.

    As the flood water was receding in August 2004, the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) launched a Rapid Assessment of Flood 2004. The study was motivated by the need to understand the nature of damage incurred by the economy, and the survival strategies adopted by the flood victims. More importantly, this was a timely professional initiative on the part of the country’s civil society to articulate a set of public policy interventions towards mitigation of the adverse consequences of Flood 2004. CPD’s Flood Assessment 2004 will possibly be best remembered for the controversy and debate it generated through an early publication of its “damage estimate,” which was corroborated widely by other independent sources. CPD deployed “triangulation methodology” in estimating the flood damage and its spatial distribution, and also for tracing the policy responses of the government and the NGOs. The methodology essentially involved analysis of primary data from field survey, knowledge derived from key informant debriefing; and secondary information from the official sources and media.

    The cornerstone of CPD’s Rapid Assessment of Flood 2004 was, however, a post-flood public policy package which focused on macroeconomic management and sectoral measures. The study also provided a budgetary estimate indicating that Bangladesh is capable of financing a large part of the anticipated rehabilitation costs from domestic sources.

    Co-published with The University Press Limited (UPL)

    Publication Period: January 2005
    ISBN 984-05-1709-0
    Price: Tk. 385 USD 30

    Hard copy of the book is available at CPD Office