Actually 3200K lamps tend to have very short lives, even as halogen/krypton/xenon, and only short lived (typically a few hundred hours), or very high powered ones get past 20 luments/watt. The upper limit for long life lamps (1000+ hours) is about 2950K. For example a GE 100 watt HIR Lamp (the HIR's are the highest efficiency) is 20 lumens per watt. There are halogens at 3200K and 20+ lumens per watt, but they tend to be 150-300 hour life.
Kryton and Xenon are added to effectively slow down the boiling off of the tungsten filament to the walls of the lamp, and as inert gases will not react with the tungsten. The darkening you see on many light bults at end of life is in fact tunstent that has been boiled off the filament and deposited on the inside of the envelope. Halogens react the Tungsten vapor to form compounds so they halogens effectively scrub the tugnsten off the lamp envelope as long as it is hot enough. In the vicinity of the filament, the temperature are high enough for the tungsten to disassociate with the halogen, and it gets redeposited on the filament, incrasing lamp life, keeping the lamp envelope transparent contributes to high lamp output throughout the life of the lamp.
By contrast even small HID lamps are very efficient. The 10 watt Welch-Alyn is 50 lumens per watt, and by the time you get to 175 watts, most HID's are running at right around 100 lumens per watt, a 1000 watts are tyipcally about 110 lumens per watt. These devices do have strong negative resistance characteristics (one they flash over to light, the resisitance in the arc is very low, so they are ballasted to prevent runway.
The most efficient lamps of Low Pressure sodum SOX lamps, although the colour rendition is best described as SUX's...
They have essentially monochromatic output in yellow, 200+ lumens per watt is pretty common in a 200+ watt SOX lamps.
High pressure sodium (a sort of pink/gold output) tends to be a little better than HID, a 1000 watt HPS can deliver about 140 lumens per watt, better colour rendition than SOX (not hard), but nowhere near as good as the best HID lighting can provide.