Professor Sir Richard Blundell: all content

Showing 21 – 40 of 415 results

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The impact of health on labour supply near retirement

Journal article

Estimates of how health affects employment vary considerably. We assess how different methods and health measures impact estimates of the impact of health on employment using a unified framework for the US and England.

19 January 2021

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What has been happening to career progression?

Report

Interest in the issue of career progression has been growing, fuelled by a decade of stagnant productivity and pay growth (even before the COVID-19 crisis) and concerns that changes in the labour market – such as the casualisation of work in the gig economy – are making it harder for some groups to progress.

31 July 2020

Fiscal Studies cover

COVID‐19 and Inequalities

Journal article
This paper describes what we know so far about the impacts of the COVID‐19 crisis on inequalities across several key domains of life.

27 June 2020

A temporary VAT cut could help stimulate the economy, but only if timed correctly

Report

Reports indicate the government is considering a temporary cut in VAT to stimulate consumer demand, possibly targeted at sectors such as tourism and restaurants. Overall the case for a temporary VAT cut now is mixed. It could provide an important fillip to consumer demand if implemented under the right conditions. Its expiration must be carefully timed so as not to choke off a nascent recovery.

26 June 2020

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Covid-19: the impacts of the pandemic on inequality

Event 11 June 2020 at 11:00 <p>Please see above for details on how to watch this event online.</p>
The Covid-19 pandemic has widened some existing inequalities and opened up new divides. Sector shutdowns, social distancing measures and school closures have disproportionately affected certain parts of the population, and the health impacts of the virus have not been evenly spread.

Covid-19: the impacts of the pandemic on inequality

Report

Much of the debate about the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, our responses to it, and the longer-term legacy that it will leave has quickly become a discussion about various forms of inequality.

11 June 2020