Downloads
publicservices.ppt
PPT | 740 KB
<p>These slides were delivered at the IFS 2010 Spending Review briefing, 21 October 2010. </p>
Authors
Cormac O'Dea
Research Associate Yale University
Cormac is a Research Associate of the IFS, an Assistant Professor of Economics at the Yale University and Research Fellow at the NBER.
Presentation details
- Publisher
- IFS
Suggested citation
O'Dea, C. (2010). 'Who loses most from public service cuts?' [Presentation]. London: IFS. Available at: https://ifs.org.uk/publications/who-loses-most-public-service-cuts (accessed: 25 April 2024).
More from IFS
Understand this issue
Sure Start achieved its aims, then we threw it away
comment
"We know that poor children grow up with poor life chances. We know how to ameliorate that. The choice is ours." Paul Johnson writes for the Times.
15 April 2024
Public investment: what you need to know
explainer
Everything you wanted to know about UK public investment but were too afraid to ask – including analysis of Labour and Conservative plans.
25 April 2024
The way Chancellors respond to economic news adds to our debt - here's why
explainer
Chancellors don’t respond symmetrically to good and bad economic news. The result is higher debt.
1 March 2024
Policy analysis
Recent trends in public sector pay
report
How has public sector pay changed in recent years? Which type of workers have done better and which have done worse?
26 March 2024
Gap between higher- and lower-paid public sector workers falls by more than a third since 2007 as doctors and experienced teachers have faced unprecedented pay cuts
press release
How has public sector pay changed in recent years? Which type of workers have done better and which have done worse?
26 March 2024
Major challenges for education in Wales
report
This report examines the major challenges for education in Wales, including low outcomes across a range of measures and high levels of inequality.
21 March 2024
Academic research
Police infrastructure, police performance, and crime: Evidence from austerity cuts
working paper
Focusing on a wave of austerity cuts, I show that police station closure increased violent crimes in census blocks near the defunct stations.
24 April 2024
Labour market inequality and the changing life cycle profile of male and female wages
working paper
We estimate the distribution of life cycle wages for cohorts of prime-age men and women in the US.
15 April 2024
There and back again: women’s marginal commuting costs
working paper
We estimate female and male workers’ marginal willingness to pay to reduce commuting distance in Germany.
2 April 2024