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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Chris Giles of the Financial Times interviews Carl Emmerson about the forthcoming Autumn Statement
What Is? sessions are designed to provide an introduction to a range of research methods and related methodological issues. The methods will be presented in an accessible fashion and their uses will be described. In this session the presentations will be on multimodality and regression discontinuity. Each presentation will last about 25 minutes and will be followed by about 20 minutes of questions from the audience, who are assumed to be interested but to have no prior knowledge of the method under discussion.
Wenchao Jin
This interview is about the distributional impact of higher education funding reforms in England.
John Jerrim
This interview is about the socio-economic gradient in teenagers' reading skills.
Presentation given at the Visionary Network Webinar July 2012
Jake Anders
This interview with Jake Anders is about the link between household income, university applications and university attendance.
This presentation was given at the fifth ESRC Research Methods Festival at St Catherine’s College, Oxford, on 3 July 2012. What Is? sessions are designed to provide an introduction to a range of research methods and related methodological issues.
In this video, Carl Emmerson, Deputy Director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, provides an outlook on the consequences of three different scenarios for NHS and social care funding over the next decade.
This presentation was given at the fifth ESRC Research Methods Festival at St Catherine’s College, Oxford, on 3 July 2012.
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