World Bank surveys what Grenada residents actually think — no abstract reveals what was measured
What happened
The World Bank published a survey report on public opinion in Grenada for fiscal year 2025, but the document abstract is missing, making it impossible to know what questions were asked or what the findings show. This opacity means readers cannot assess whether the survey measured attitudes on development priorities, government services, economic conditions, or something else entirely.
Why it matters
Survey data becomes actionable evidence only when you know what was actually measured and what people said — without an abstract, this document is a filing with no visible content. If this survey measured public demand for specific infrastructure, services, or policy changes, that information should be transparently available; opacity suggests either the results are unremarkable or the World Bank is not prioritizing public accessibility. Watch whether the full report (with abstract and findings) gets released, and whether other development agencies begin requiring summaries of public opinion research in their own documentation.