Facts and figures about UK taxes, benefits and public spending.
Income distribution, poverty and inequality.
Analysing government fiscal forecasts and tax and spending.
Analysis of the fiscal choices an independent Scotland would face.
Case studies that give a flavour of the areas where IFS research has an impact on society.
Reforming the tax system for the 21st century.
A peer-reviewed quarterly journal publishing articles by academics and practitioners.
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Kate joined the IFS in 2011. Her current research focuses on food expenditure and its relationship to household income, including questions related to whether good nutrition is positively correlated with income.
All available publications
Kate Smith, Rachel Griffith and Martin O'Connell, December 2012,
Measuring the quality of people's diets: a comparison of intake and purchase data,
Presentations
Rachel Griffith, Michal Krol and Kate Smith, December 2012,
Variation in own-brand penetration across product categories and stores: the role of rivalrous vs industry-expanding advertising,
Presentations
Rachel Griffith, Michal Krol and Kate Smith, December 2012,
Variation in own-brand penetration across product categories and stores: the role of rivalurous vs industry expanding advertising (empirical predictions),
Presentations
Kate Smith, November 2012,
How, and should, the government tackle diet-related disease?,
Presentations
Cormac O'Dea and Kate Smith, November 2012,
Food for thought? Household spending in the Great Recession,
External publications
Kate Smith, October 2012,
The growth of diet-related dissease: when, and how, should governments intervene?,
External publications
Rachel Griffith, Martin O'Connell and Kate Smith, July 2012,
The socioeconomic gradient in diet,
Presentations
Rachel Griffith, Martin O'Connell and Kate Smith, March 2012,
Household food purchasing behaviour,
Presentations
Rachel Griffith, Martin O'Connell and Kate Smith, November 2011,
Microeconomic analysis of prices, food and nutrition,
Presentations
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