This lecture was given at the University of Minho by Richard Blundell, who was awarded the Cátedra Professor Carlos Lloyd Braga honorary chair in 2013.
Authors
Richard Blundell
CPP Co-Director
Richard is Co-Director of the Centre for the Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy (CPP) and Senior Research Fellow at IFS.
Presentation details
- Publisher
- IFS
Suggested citation
Blundell, R. (2013). 'Consumption inequality and family labour supply' [Presentation]. London: IFS. Available at: https://ifs.org.uk/publications/consumption-inequality-and-family-labour-supply (accessed: 20 April 2024).
Related documents
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
Spring Budget 2024: What you need to know
podcast
IFS reaction to the Chancellor's Spring Budget.
7 March 2024
A mess has been made of Child Benefit, and the clear-up operation may not be easy
comment
"Status quos can be hard to change, no matter how incoherent they are." Robert Joyce writes about child benefit in The Telegraph.
29 March 2024
Policy analysis
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
Recent trends in and the outlook for health-related benefits
report
Recipients of and spending on health-related benefits have risen rapidly since the start of the pandemic, posing a serious challenge for policymakers.
19 April 2024
4.2 million working-age people now claiming health-related benefits, could rise by 30% by the end of the decade
press release
Our new report sheds more light on forecasts for a substantial increase in the number of people claiming health-related benefits in coming years.
19 April 2024
Academic research
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
Interpreting cohort profiles of lifecycle earnings volatility
working paper
We present new estimates of earnings volatility over time and the lifecycle for men and women by race and human capital.
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