> Publishers' series
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W20, 1:
The impacts of private hospital entry on the public market for elective care in England Elaine Kelly, George Stoye
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 09 Jan 2020
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W20, 11:
Inequality in socio-emotional skills a cross-cohort comparison Orazio Attanasio, Richard Blundell, Gabriella Conti, Giacomo Mason
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 01 Apr 2020
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W20, 12:
Macroeconomic conditions and health in Britain aggregation, dynamics and local area heterogeneity Katharina Janke, Kevin Lee, Carol Propper, Kalvinder Shields, Michael A. Shields
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 14 Apr 2020
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W20, 10:
Changes in assortative matching theory and evidence for the US Pierre André Chiappori, Mónica Costa Dias, Costas Meghir
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 01 Apr 2020
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W20, 5:
Incentivizing demand for supply-constrained care institutional birth in India Alison Andrew, Marcos Vera-Hernández
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 06 Feb 2020
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W20, 6:
OLS estimation of the intra-household distribution of expenditure Valérie Lechene, Krishna Pendakur, Alex Wolf
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 09 Mar 2020
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W20, 17:
Inflation spike and falling product variety during the Great Lockdown Xavier Jaravel, Martin O'Connell
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 12 Jun 2020
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W20, 18:
The effects of social policies on the working careers of Europeans Agar Brugiavini, Giuseppe De Luca, Thomas MaCurdy, Guglielmo Weber
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 15 Jun 2020
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W20, 19:
Jobs and job quality between the eve of the Great Recession and the eve of COVID-19 Pascale Bourquin, Tom Waters
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 25 Jun 2020
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W20, 20:
Labelled loans and human capital investments Britta Augsburg, Bet Caeyers, Sara Giunti, Bansi Malde, Susanna Smets
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 03 Jul 2020
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W20, 21:
A job worth waiting for parental wealth and youth unemployment in Ghana Stephanie De Mel
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 09 Jul 2020
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W20, 22:
Herding in quality assessment an application to organ transplantation Stephanie De Mel, Kaivan Munshi, Soenje Reiche, Hamid Sabourian
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 09 Jul 2020
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W20, 2:
House price rises and borrowing to invest Thomas F. Crossley, Peter Levell, Hamish Low
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 22 Jan 2020
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W20, 3:
Estimating the production function for human capital results from a randomized controlled trial in Colombia Orazio Attanasio, Sarah Cattan, Emla Fitzsimons, Costas Meghir, Marta Rubio-Codina
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 22 Jan 2020
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W20, 4:
The effects of home visiting on mother-child interactions evidence from a randomised trial using dynamic micro-level data Gabriella Conti, Stavros Poupakis, Malte Sandner, Sören Kliem
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 27 Jan 2020
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W20, 7:
Subjective expectations and demand for contraception Grant Miller, Áureo de Paula, Christine Valente
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 16 Mar 2020
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W20, 8:
How well targeted are soda taxes? Pierre Dubois, Rachel Griffith, Martin O'Connell
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 30 Mar 2020
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W20, 9:
Does more free childcare help parents work more? Mike Brewer, Sarah Cattan, Claire Crawford, Birgitta Rabe
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 30 Mar 2020
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W20, 13:
How accurate are self-reported diagnoses? comparing self-reported health events in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing with administrative hospital records George Stoye, Ben Zaranko
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 29 May 2020
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W20, 14:
Informality, consumption taxes and redistribution Pierre Bachas, Lucie Gadenne, Anders Jensen
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 01 Jun 2020
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W20, 15:
The idiosyncratic impact of an aggregate shock the distributional consequences of COVID-19 Michaela Benzeval, Jon Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, Paul Fisher, Annette Jäckle, Hamish Low, Brendan Read
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 04 Jun 2020
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W20, 16:
The mental health effects of the first two months of lockdown and social distancing during the Covid-19 pandemic in the UK James Banks, Xiaowei Xu
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 10 Jun 2020
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W19, 24:
House prices and consumption inequality Ben Etheridge
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 23 Sep 2019
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W19, 29:
Permanent versus transitory income shocks over the business cycle Agnes Kovacs, Concetta Rondinelli, Serena Trucchi
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 01 Nov 2019
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W19, 27:
Durables and lemons private information and the market for cars Richard Blundell, Ran Gu, Soren Leth-Petersen, Hamish Low, Costas Meghir
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 23 Oct 2019
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W19, 28:
Should generations differ in their wealth accumulation? Rowena Crawford, David Sturrock
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 31 Oct 2019
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W19, 30:
Uniform sharing Alex Wolf
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 04 Nov 2019
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W19, 25:
Intertemporal income shifting and the taxation of owner-managed businesses Helen Miller, Thomas Pope, Kate Smith
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 21 Oct 2019
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W19, 03:
Interaction, stereotypes and performance evidence from South Africa Lucia Corno, Eliana La Ferrara, Justine Burns
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 30 Jan 2019
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W19, 04:
Econometrics of valuing income contingent student loans using administrative data groups of English students Jack Britton, Neil Shephard, Laura van der Erve
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 06 Mar 2019
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W19, 05:
Preferences and beliefs in the marriage market for young brides Abi Adams, Alison Andrew
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 07 Mar 2019
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W19, 07:
The effect of automatic enrolment on employees working for small employers Jonathan Cribb, Carl Emmerson
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 26 Mar 2019
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W19, 02:
Survival pessimism and the demand for annuities Corman O'Dea, David Sturrock
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 17 Jan 2019
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W19, 06:
Cluster randomised trial of the effects of timing and duration of early childhood interventions in Odisha - India study protocol Orazio Attanasio, Britta Augsburg, Jere Behrman, Sally Grantham-McGregor, Pamela Jervis, Costas Meghir, Angus Phimister, Marta Rubio-Codina
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 21 Mar 2019
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W19, 11:
Community matters heterogenous impacts of a sanitation intervention Laura Abramovsky, Britta Augsburg, Melanie Lührmann, Francisco Oteiza, Juan Pablo Rud
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 06 Jun 2019
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W19, 26:
Specific capital, firm insurance, and the dynamics of the postgraduate wage premium Ran Gu
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 22 Oct 2019
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W19, 31:
Principles and practice of taxing small business Stuart Adam, Helen Miller
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 10 Dec 2019
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W19, 32:
Disability insurance error rates and gender differences Hamish Low, Luigi Pistaferri
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 10 Dec 2019
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W19, 22:
Variation in end-of-life hospital spending in England evidence from linked survey and administrative data Tom Lee, George Stoye
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 12 Sep 2019
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W19, 08:
Wages, experience and training of women over the lifecycle Richard Blundell, Monica Costa-Dias, David Goll, Costas Meghir
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 29 Apr 2019
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W19, 09:
Labelled loans, credit constraints and sanitation investments Britta Augsburg, Bet Caeyers, Sara Giunti, Bansi Malde, Susanna Smets
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 07 May 2019
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W19, 10:
Can micro-credit support public health subsidy programs? Britta Augsburg, Bet Caeyers, Bansi Malde
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 07 May 2019
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W19, 12:
Why has in-work poverty risen in Britain? Pascale Bourquin, Jonathan Cribb, Tom Waters, Xiaowei Xu
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 07 Jun 2019
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W19, 14:
What do we really know about the employment effects of the UK's national minimum wage? Mike Brewer, Thomas Crossley, Federico Zilio
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 13 Jun 2019
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W19, 15:
Complementarities in the production of child health Laura Abramovsky, Britta Augsburg, Pamela Jervis, Bansi Malde, Angus Phimister
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 14 Jun 2019
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W19, 16:
Regression with an imputed dependent variable Thomas F. Crossley, Peter Levell, Stavros Poupakis
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 24 Jun 2019
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W19, 17:
Developmental origins of health inequality Gabriella Conti, Giacomo Mason, Stavros Poupakis
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 26 Jun 2019
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W19, 18:
Temptation and commitment understanding the demand for illiquidity Agnes Kovacs, Patrick Moran
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 01 Jul 2019
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W19, 19:
OLS estimation of the intra-household distribution of consumption Valérie Lechene, Krishna Pendakur, Alex Wolf
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 11 Jul 2019
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W19, 23:
Preschool quality and child development Alison Andrew, Orazio Attanasio, Raquel Bernal, Lina Cardona Sosa, Sonya Krutikova, Marta Rubio-Codina
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 23 Sep 2019
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W19, 13:
The impact of work on cognition and physical disability evidence from English women James Banks, Jonathan Cribb, Carl Emmerson, David Sturrock
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 11 Jun 2019
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W19, 20:
Forward guidance communication, commitment, or both? Marco Bassetto
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 29 Jul 2019
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W19, 21:
Taxation and supplier networks evidence from India Lucie Gadenne, Tushar K. Nandi, Roland Rathelot
London: The Institute for Fiscal Studies, 20 Aug 2019
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W19, 01:
Does information break the political resource curse? experimental evidence from Mozambique Alex Armand, Alexander Coutts, Pedro C. Vicente, In̂es Vilela
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 22 Jan 2019
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W18, 25:
The impact of higher education on the living standards of female graduates Chris Belfield, Laura van der Erve
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 24 Oct 2018
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W18, 28:
Community matters heterogenous impacts of a sanitation intervention Laura Abramovsky, Britta Augsburg, Melanie Lührmann, Francisco Oteiza, Juan Pablo Rud
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 06 Nov 2018
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W18, 26:
Parental leave benefits, household labor supply, and children's long-run outcomes Rita Ginja, Jenny Jans, Arizo Karimi
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 25 Oct 2018
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W18, 21:
Can rationing increase welfare? theory and an application to India's ration shop system Lucie Gadenne
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 27 Sep 2018
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W18, 23:
Protecting vulnerable consumers in "switching markets" Walter Beckert, Paolo Siciliani
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 08 Oct 2018
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W18, 27:
The return to work and how it is taxed a dynamic perspective Mike Brewer, Monica Costa Dias, Jonathan Shaw
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 31 Oct 2018
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W18, 29:
The impact of child work on cognitive development results from four low to middle income countries Michael Keane, Sonya Krutikova, Timothy Neal ; IFS
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 06 Nov 2018
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W18, 11:
Redistribution via VAT and cash transfers an assessment in four low and middle income countries Tom Harris, David Phillips, Ross Warwick, Maya Goldman, Jon Jellema, Karolina Goraus, Gabriela Inchauste
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 01:
Family, firms and the gender wage gap in France Elise Coudin, Sophie Maillard, Maxime Tô
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 02:
The gender pay gap in the UK children and experience in work Monica Costa Dias, Robert Joyce and Francesca Parodi
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 03:
Firm-level investment spikes and aggregate investment over the Great Recession Richard Disney, Helen Miller, Thomas Pope
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 06:
Climate change and agriculture farmer adaptation to extreme heat Fernando M. Aragón, Francisco Oteiza, Juan Pablo Rud
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 07:
Voluntary disclosure schemes for offshore tax evasion Matthew Gould, Matthew D. Rablen
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 15:
The impact of cuts to social care spending on the use of accident and emergency departments in England Rowena Crawford, George Stoye, Ben Zaranko
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, [2018]
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W18, 20:
The value of health insurance a household job search approach Gabriella Conti, Rita Ginja, Renata Narita
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, [2018]
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W18, 05:
Marriage, labour supply and the dynamics of the social safety net Hamish Low, Costas Meghir, Luigi Pistaferri, Alessandra Voena
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 08:
A lattice test for additive separability Matthew Polisson
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 09:
The determinants of local police spending Rowena Crawford, Richard Disney, Polly Simpson
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 12:
The dynamics of domestic violence learning about the match Dan Anderberg, Noemi Mantovan, Robert M. Sauer
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 13:
Production efficiency and profit taxation Stéphane Gauthier, Guy Laroque
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 14:
Subjective expectations of survival and economic behaviour Cormac O'Dea, David Sturrock
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, [2018]
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W18, 17:
Insurance in extended family networks Orazio Attanasio, Costas Meghir, Carina Mommarts
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, [2018]
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W18, 19:
Should there be lower taxes on patent income? Fabian Gaessler, Bronwyn H. Hall, Dietmar Harhoff
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, [2018]
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W18, 04:
Lost in translation what do Engel curves tell us about the cost of living? Ingvild Almas, Timothy K.M. Beatty, Thomas F. Crossley
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 10:
Policy discontinuity and duration outcomes Gerard J. van den Berg, Antoine Bozio, Mónica Costa Dias
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2018
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W18, 18:
Estimating the production function for human capital results from a randomized controlled trial in Colombia Orazio Attanasio, Sarah Cattan, Emla Fitzsimmons, Costas Meghir, Marta Rubio-Codina
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, [2018]
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W18, 16:
Education policy and intergenerational transfers in equilibrium Brant Abbott, Giovanni Gallipoli, Costas Meghir, Giovanni L. Violante
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, [2018]
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W18, 22:
Inequality in socioemotional skills a cross-cohort comparison Orazio Attanasio, Richard Blundell, Gabriella Conti, Giacomo Mason
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 08 Oct 2018
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W18, 24:
Are the poor so present-biased? Rachel Cassidy
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 17 Oct 2018
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W18, 30:
Beyond birth weight the origins of human capital Gabriella Conti, Mark Hanson, Hazel Inskip, Sarah Crozier, Cyrus Cooper, Keith Godfrey
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 19 Nov 2018
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W17, 27:
Entering the labour market in a weak economy scarring and insurance Jonathan Cribb, Andrew Hood, Robert Joyce
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2017
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W17, 28:
Tax design in the alcohol market Rachel Griffith, Martin O'Connell, Kate Smith
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2017
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W17, 29:
Labour supply responses to financial wealth shocks evidence from Italy Renata Bottazzi, Serena Trucchi, Matthew Wakefield
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2017
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W17, 08:
Tax avoidance and optimal income tax enforcement Duccio Gamannossi degl'Innocenti, Matthew D. Rablen
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 07 June 2017
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W17, 09:
What do consumers consider before they choose? identification from asymmetric demand responses Jason Abaluck, Abi Adams
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 07 July 2017
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W17, 10:
Can't wait to get my pension the effect of raising the female state pension age on income, poverty and deprivation Jonathan Cribb, Carl Emmerson
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 02 August 2017
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W17, 11:
Intergenerational income persistence within families Chris Belfield, Claire Crawford, Ellen Greaves, Paul Gregg, Lindsey Macmillan
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, August 2017
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W17, 14:
Frictions and taxpayer responses evidence from bunching at personal tax thresholds Stuart Adam, James Browne, David Phillips, Barra Roantree
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, August 2017
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W17, 15:
Divided by choice? private providers, patient choice and hospital sorting in the English National Health Service Walter Beckert, Elaine Kelly
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, August 9, 2017
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W17, 18:
The impact of health on labour supply near retirement Richar Blundell, Jack Britton, Monica Costa Dias, Eric French
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, August 2017
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W17, 12:
Updating and critiquing HMRC's analysis of the UK's 50% top marginal rate of tax James Browne, David Phillips
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 22 August 2017
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W17, 13:
Estimating the size and nature of responses to changes in income tax rates on top incomes in the UK a panel analysis James Browne, David Phillips
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 22 August 2017
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W17, 16:
Peer effects in risky choices among adolescents Konstantin E. Lucks, Melanie Lührmann, Joachim Winter
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, August 17, 2017
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W17, 03:
Discretizing unobserved heterogeneity Stéphane Bonhomme, Thibaut Lamadon, Elena Manresa
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 22 March 2017
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W17, 04:
Who receives Medicaid in old age? rules and reality Margherita Borella, Mariacristina De Nardi, Eric French
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 12 April 2017
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W17, 02:
Design of optimal corrective taxes in the alcohol market Rachel Griffith, Martin O'Connell, Kate Smith
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 31 January 2017
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W17, 07:
Optimal taxation in occupational choice models an application to the work decisions of couples Guy Laroque, Nicola Pavoni
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 04 May 2017
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W17, 17:
Mobility and the lifetime distributional impact of tax and transfer reforms Peter Levell, Barra Roantree, Jonathan Shaw
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 25 August 2017
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W17, 01:
Two decades of income inequality in Britain the role of wages, household earnings and redistribution Chris Belfield, Richard Blundell, Jonathan Cribb, Andrew Hood, Robert Joyce
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 13 January 2017
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W17, 05:
Is infation default? the role of information in debt crises Marco Bassetto, Carlo Galli
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 02 May 2017
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W17, 06:
Estimating the production function for human capital results from a randomized controlled trial in Colombia Orazio Attanasio, Sarah Cattan, Emla Fitzsimons, Costas Meghir, Marta Rubio-Codina
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 27 April 2017
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W17, 20:
Lift and shift the effect of fundraising interventions in charity space and time Kimberley Scharf, Sarah Smith, Mark Ottoni-Wilhelm
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 04 October 2017
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W17, 22:
Risk-based selection and unemployment insurance evidence and implications Camille Landais, Arash Nekoei, Peter Nilsson, David Seim, Johannes Spinnewijn
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 10 October 2017
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W17, 19:
The donation response to natural disasters Sarah Smith, Mark Ottoni-Wilhelm, Kimberley Scharf
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 04 October 2017
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W17, 21:
The short- and long-term effects of student absence evidence from Sweden Sarah Cattan, Daniel A. Kamhöfer, Martin Karlsson, Therese Nilsson
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 05 October 2017
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W17, 23:
The health benefits of a targeted cash transfer the UK winter fuel payment Thomas F. Crossley, Federico Zilio
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 18 October 2017
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W17, 24:
The dynamic effects of tax audits Arun Advani, William Elming, Jonathan Shaw
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 26 October 2017
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W17, 25:
Income inequality and the labour market in Britain and the US Richard Blundell, Robert Joyce, Agnes Norris Keiller, James P. Ziliak
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 01 November 2017
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W17, 26:
Who benefits from free health insurance evidence from Mexico Gabriella Conti, Rita Ginja
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 02 November 2017
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W16/03:
Female labour supply, human capital and welfare reform Richard Blundell, Monica Costas Dias, Costas Meghir, Jonathan Shaw
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, February 2016
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W16, 16:
Life-cycle consumption patterns at older ages in the US and the UK can medical expenditures explain the difference? James Banks, Richard Blundell, Peter Levell, James P. Smith
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 09 September 2016
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W16, 17:
Mobility and the lifetime distributional impact of tax and transfer reforms Peter Levell, Barra Roantree, Jonathan Shaw
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 09 September 2016
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W16, 21:
Choice in the presence of experts the role of general practitioners in patients' hospital choice Walter Beckert, Kate Collyer
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 14 November 2016
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W16, 20:
The right to buy public housing in Britain a welfare analysis Richard Disney, Guannan Luo
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 14 November 2016
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W16, 22:
Free childcare and parents' labour supply is more better? Mike Brewer, Sarah Cattan, Claire Crawford, Birgitta Rabe
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 02 December 2016
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W16, 24:
Explaining low employment rates among older women in urban China Wenchao Jin
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 05 December 2016
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W16, 18:
Spillovers of community-based health interventions on consumption smoothing Emla Fitzsimons, Bansi Malde Marcos, Vera-Hernández
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 18 October 2016
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W16/05:
Scotland's fiscal framework assessing the agreement David Bell, David Eiser, David Phillips
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, [March 2016]
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W16/02:
Technology entry in the presence of patent thickets Bronwyn H. Hall, Christian Helmers, Georg von Graevenitz
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, January 16, 2016
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W16, 15:
New joints private providers and rising demand in the English national health service Elaine Kelly, George Stoye
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 26 August 2016
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W16, 1:
The UK wage premium puzzle how did a large increase in university graduates leave the education premium unchanged? Richard Blundell, David A. Green, Wenchao Jin
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 17 June 2016
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W16, 9:
The marriage market, labour supply and education choice Pierre-Andre Chiappori, Monica Costa Dias, Costas Meghir
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 18 July 2016
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W16/04:
Education policy and intergenerational transfers in equilibrium Brant Abbott, Giovanni Gallipoli, Costas Meghir, Giovanni L. Violante
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, March 15, 2016
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W16, 6:
How English domiciled graduate earnings vary with gender, institution attended, subject and socio-economic background Jack Britton, Lorraine Dearden, Neil Shephard, Anna Vignoles
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 13 April 2016
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W16, 7:
Taxing high-income earners tax avoidance and mobility Alejandro Esteller, Amedeo Piolatto, Matthew D. Rablen
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 22 April 2016
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W16, 8:
Selling daughters age of marriage, income shocks and the bride price tradition Lucia Corno, Alessandra Voena
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 17 June 2016
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W16, 13:
Money or fun? why students want to pursue further education Chris Belfield, Teodora Boneva, Christopher Rauh, Jonathan Shaw
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 08 August 2016
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W16, 10:
Consumption during the Great Recession in Italy Martina Celidoni, Michele De Nadai, Guglielmo Weber
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 20 July 2016
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W16, 11:
Can't work or won't work quasi-experimental evidence on work search requirements for single parents Silvia Avram, Mike Brewer, Andrea Salvatori
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 28 July 2016
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W16, 12:
Housing equity, saving and debt dynamics over the Great Recession William Elming, Andreas Ermler
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 02 August 2016
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W16, 14:
The effect of gender-targeted conditional cash transfers on household expenditures evidence from a randomized experiment Alex Armand, Orazio Attanasio, Pedro Carneiro, Valérie Lechene
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 19 August 2016
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W16, 19:
What happens when employers are obliged to nudge? automatic enrolment and pension saving in the UK Jonathan Cribb, Carl Emmerson
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 17 November 2016
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W16, 23:
"Randomisation bias" in the medical literature a review Barbara Sianesi
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 21 November 2016
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W15/33:
Income changes and their determinants over the lifecycle Andrew Hood, Robert Joyce
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, December 2015
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W15/32:
Sanitation and child health in India Britta Augsburg, Paul Rodriguez-Lesmes
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, 1st December 2015
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W15/31:
Group size and the efficiency of informal risk sharing Emla Fitzsimons, Bansi Malde, Marcos Vera-Hernandez
London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, October 2015
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11,04:
The effect of childhood education on old age cognitive abilities evidence from a regression discontinuity design James Banks; Fabrizio Mazzonna
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2011
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11,01:
Extensive and intensive margins of labour supply working hours in the US, UK and France Richard Blundell, Antoine Bozio and Guy Laroque
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2011
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11,03:
The socio-economic gradient in early child outcomes evidence from the Millennium Cohort Study Lorraine Dearden; Luke Sibieta; Kathy Sylva
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2011
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11,02:
How much do lifetime earnings explain retirement resources? by Antoine Bozio, Carl Emmerson and Gemma Tetlow
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2011
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11,05:
The effect of abolishing university tuition costs evidence from Ireland Kevin Denny
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2011
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11,06:
The impact of minimum wages on quit, layoff and hiring rates Pierre Brochu and David A. Green
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2011
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10,20:
Empirically probing the quantity-quality model Emla Fitzsimons and Bansi Malde
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,21:
The demand for private schooling in England the impact of price and quality Richard Blundell; Lorraine Dearden; Luke Sibieta
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,01:
Employment protection legislation, multinational firms and innovation Rachel Griffith and Gareth Macartney
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,03:
Occupational pension value in the public and private sectors Rowena Crawford, Carl Emmerson and Gemma Tetlow
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,04:
Widening participation in higher education analysis using linked administrative data Haroon Chowdry ; Claire Crawford ; Lorraine Dearden ; Alissa Goodman ; Anna Vignoles
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,05:
Earnings, consumption and lifecycle choices Costas Meghir and Luigi Pistaferri
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,06:
When you are born matters the impact of date of birth on educational outcomes in England Claire Crawford; Lorraine Dearden; Costas Meghir
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,07:
The price elasticity of charitable giving does the form of tax relief matter? Kim Scharf; Sarah Smith
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,09:
Minimum wage setting and standards of fairness David A. Green and Kathryn Harrison
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,10:
Econometric methods for research in education Costas Meghir and Steven Rivkin
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,11:
Disability risk, disability insurance and life cycle behavior Hamish Low; Luigi Pistaferri
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,02:
Releasing jobs for the young? early retirement and youth unemployment in the United Kingdom James Banks, Richard Blundell, Antoine Bozio and Carl Emmerson
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,12:
Money, mentoring and making friends the impact of a multidimensional access program on student performance Kevin Denny; Orla Doyle; Patricia O'Reilly; Vincent O'Sullivan
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,14:
Education choices in Mexico using a structural model and a randomized experiment to evaluate Progresa Orazio Attanasio; Costas Meghir; Ana Santiago
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,15:
The role of attitudes and behaviours in explaining socio-economic differences in attainment at age 16 Haroon Chowdry; Claire Crawford; Alissa Goodman
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,16:
Explaining the socio-economic gradient in child outcomes the intergenerational transmission of cognitive skills Claire Crawford; Alissa Goodman; Robert Joyce
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,17:
Conditional cash transfers, women and the demand for food Orazio Attanasio; Valérie Lechene
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,23:
Child poverty in the UK since 1998-99 lessons from the past decade Mike Brewer, James Browne, Robert Joyce and Luke Sibieta
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,18:
Non cooperative household demand Valérie Lechene and Ian Preston
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,22:
What determines private school choice? a comparison between the UK and Australia Lorraine Dearden; Chris Ryan; Luke Sibieta
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,24:
Redistribution, work incentives and thirty years of UK tax and benefit reform Stuart Adam and James Browne
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,13:
Career progression and formal versus on-the-job training J. Adda; C. Dustmann; C. Meghir ; J.-M. Robin
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,19:
Starting school and leaving welfare the impact of public education on lone parents' welfare receipt Mike Brewer; Claire Crawford
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010
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10,08:
Did the extension of the franchise increase the Liberal vote in Victorian Britain? evidence from the Second Reform Act Samuel Berlinski and Torun Dewan
London: Inst. for Fiscal Studies, 2010