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Consumption and demand
Understanding how consumers make decisions and what affects their behaviour is of key importance across a wide range of policy issues, from the analysis of indirect taxation to the assessment of competition policy. For example, the most recent developments in industrial organisation focus on how firms in imperfectly competitive markets interact, taking the structure of consumer demand as given. The nature of the equilibria that prevail in different markets depends crucially on the nature of consumer decisions.

Past research at IFS has played a leading role in the development of policy-relevant empirical models of consumer behaviour. Looking forward, our research will put the consumer at the heart of competition analysis by providing a rigorous characterisation of consumer behaviour. This is crucial for designing regulatory structures and the implementation of consumer and competition policy across many markets, from retailing to telecoms.

Our research aims to develop the analysis of consumer decision-making in conjunction with the analysis of newly available Consumer Panel data. We study behaviour in Britain in detail but also engage in comparative research on similar data in Europe and North America.

Price indices and measures of consumer welfare are fundamental inputs into many areas of policy, influencing benefit and state pension levels, and monetary policy, as well as private sector wage bargaining. Price indices vary for many reasons, including the types of goods purchased, where the purchases are made and the extent to which firms have market power. Obtaining useful price indices requires estimates of substitution possibilities and the value placed on new goods by consumers at different points in the income distribution. Demand responses are essential inputs in the design of indirect and environmental taxes. Price discrimination and the effective cost of living across different types of consumers are important for understanding the adequacy of levels of welfare benefits and pensions. The new Consumer Panel data open up an exciting new research agenda.

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Year: 309 publications
12 April 2010
Orazio Attanasio and Monica Paiella
This paper builds a unifying framework that, within the theory of intertemporal consumption choices, brings together the limited participation-based explanation of the poor empirical performance of the C-CAPM and the transaction costs-based explanation of incomplete portfolios.
01 January 2010
This paper presents an analysis of the trends in inequality across income, earnings and consumption in Britain since 1978.
01 December 2009
This paper looks at how households in temporarily straitened circumstances due to an unemployment spell cut back on expenditure.
01 December 2009
We show empirically that the distribution of consumption expenditures across households is, within cohorts, closer to log normal than the distribution of income.
12 November 2009
This talk was given at a special session, organized by the IMF, at the National Tax Association Annual Meetings in Denver on 12 November 2009.
12 November 2009
This presentation was given at the 2009 meeting of the National Tax Association in Denver, Colorado, 12-14 November 2009.
30 October 2009
This talk was given at a Finance seminar at the University of Cambridge on 30 October 2009.
14 October 2009
This public economics lecture was delivered at Oxford and Cambridge Universities in October 2009.
22 September 2009
W09/16
Vidar Christiansen and Stephen Smith
We analyse the use of taxes and regulation in combination, to control externalities arising from individual consumption behaviour.
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