Poverty, inequality and social mobility

Poverty, inequality and social mobility

Our research looks at inequalities in living standards, education, health and other outcomes. We study the role of labour market outcomes, taxes and benefits, and structural forces like globalisation in shaping trends in poverty, inequality and social mobility.

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    Publication graphic

    Alcohol taxes and the Single Market

    Report

    This report looks at some of the economic issues surrounding the current system of alcohol taxes in the UK and considers how far current taxes on alcohol are sustainable as European integration proceeds.

    1 April 1995

    Working paper graphic

    Humps and bumps in lifetime consumption

    Working Paper

    We argue that once one departs from simple classroom example, or 'stripped down life-cycle model', the empirical model for consumption growth can be made flexible enough to fit the main features of the data.

    1 January 1995

    Working paper graphic

    Intergenerational mobility in Britain

    Working Paper

    In this paper we examine the concept of intergenerational mobility in earnings and in lifetime or 'permanent' status, and discuss its measurement using regression and quantile transition matrix approaches.

    1 January 1995

    Journal graphic

    Regulation and redistribution in utilities

    Journal article

    The consumption of utilities (for example, energy and water), along with that of other goods such as food, clothing, shelter, health and education, is often thought of as something that has particular distributional significance.

    1 January 1995

    Working paper graphic

    Vertical equity and horizontal inequity: a new approach to measurement

    Working Paper

    A new procedure for measuring horizontal inequity and vertical equity in the income tax is proposed, for which the "equals" under the tax law are socioeconomic groups, and the equal treatment norm is a command that, for equity, these groups should face the same tax schedule.

    1 January 1995

    Journal graphic

    The UK Consumption Boom of the Late 1980s: Aggregate Implications of Microeconomic Evidence

    Journal article

    Two competing explanations of the UK consumer boom in the late 1980s are the financial liberalisation-imperfect housing market hypothesis of Muellbauer and Murphy and the expectations hypothesis of King. The authors use 15 years of Family Expenditure Surveys, and cohort analysis, to investigate to what extent these two hypotheses agree with observed changes in consumption patterns.

    28 November 1994