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Organisation

Melbourne Institute

Owning Institution:
Alternate Name:

Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research

Report

"Churn" within the Australian tax and transfer systems of 2003/04 to 2008/09


The main aim of the analyses is to examine the 'churn' of tax and transfer at a micro level, where 'churn' is defined as individuals paying income tax while at the same time also receiving income support payments. The Melbourne Institute Tax and Transfer Simulator (MITTS) is used, based on updated information from the Survey...
Report

Discrete heterogeneity in the impact of health shocks on labour market outcomes


Empirical evidence from the psychology literature suggests that reactions towards health shocks depend strongly on the personality trait of locus of control, which is usually unobservable to the analyst. In this paper, the role of this discrete heterogeneity in shaping the effects of health shocks on labour supply are theoretically modelled by adopting the Grossman...
Report

Cyclical government spending, income inequality and welfare in small open economies


This paper compares the effects of pro and counter-cyclical government spending on income inequality and welfare in a small open economy. The authors examine the consequences of alternative government spending rules following shocks to productivity, domestic interest rates, terms of trade and export demand. The simulated results show that the type of spending rule makes...
Report

Families, incomes and jobs, volume 3: a statistical report on Waves 1 to 5 of the HILDA Survey


This is the third annual statistical report of the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australian (HILDA) Survey. Like the previous vol- umes (Headey, Warren and Harding, 2005; Headey and Warren, 2007), it contains short reports and statistical tables covering the four main areas of HILDA: households and family life; incomes; employment and unemployment/joblessness; life...
Report

The Australian firearms buyback and its effect on gun deaths


The 1996-97 National Firearms Agreement (NFA) in Australia introduced strict gun laws, primarily as a reaction to the mass shooting in Port Arthur, Tasmania in 1996, where 35 people were killed. Despite the fact that several researchers using the same data have examined the impact of the NFA on firearm deaths, a consensus does not...

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