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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Lars Nesheim is Lecturer in Economics at UCL and Co-Director of the Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (cemmap). After obtaining his PhD from the University of Chicago in 2001, he worked for 2 years at the Institute for Fiscal Studies before joining the Department of Economics at UCL in 2003. He teaches urban economics, econometrics, and industrial organization. His research interests focus on structural econometrics, computational economics, industrial organization, urban economics, economic dynamics and hedonic models. Since 2007 he has been an Academic Panelist for the Competition Commission providing advice to Commission staff on competition economics.
All available publications
Ekeland, Ivar, James Heckman and Lars Nesheim, May 2002,
Identifying hedonic models,
American Economic Review,
Vol. 92, No. 2, pp. 304-309,
Journal Articles
Lars Nesheim, March 2002,
Equilibrium sorting of heterogeneous consumers across locations: theory and empirical implications,
cemmap Working Papers
, CWP08/02
Ivar Ekeland, James Heckman and Lars Nesheim, January 2002,
Identification and estimation of hedonic models,
cemmap Working Papers
, CWP07/02
Ivar Ekeland, James Heckman and Lars Nesheim, January 2002,
Identifying hedonic models,
cemmap Working Papers
, CWP06/02
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