IFS Working Papers
From Institute for Fiscal Studies
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- W01/15: The life-cycle model of consumption and saving

- Martin Browning and Thomas Crossley
- W01/14: Price and quality in the UK childcare market

- Alan Duncan, Gillian Paull and Jayne Taylor
- W01/13: A measurement error approach to the study of poverty

- Nicoletta Rosati
- W01/12: Product market competition, efficiency and agency costs: an empirical analysis

- Rachel Griffith
- W01/11: The effect of a social experiment in education

- Costas Meghir and Mårten Palme
- W01/10: Characteristics of foreign-owned firms in British manufacturing

- Rachel Griffith and Helen Simpson
- W01/09: No more skivvy schemes? Active labour market policies and the British New Deal for the young unemployed in context

- John van Reenen
- W01/08: Eradicating child poverty in Britain: welfare reform and children since 1997

- Mike Brewer and Paul Gregg
- W01/07: Income variance dynamics and heterogenity

- Costas Meghir and Luigi Pistaferri
- W01/06: Limited financial market participation: a transaction cost-based explanation

- Monica Paiella
- W01/05: The dynamics of investment under uncertainty

- Nicholas Bloom, Stephen Bond and John van Reenen
- W01/04: The limits of social democracy? Tax and spend under Labour, 1974-79

- Tom Clark
- W01/03: R&D and absorptive capacity: from theory to data

- Rachel Griffith, Stephen Redding and John van Reenen
- W01/02: Criterion-based inference for GMM in autoregressive panel-data models

- Stephen Bond, Clive Bowsher and Frank Windmeijer
- W01/01: Wages, experience and seniority

- Christian Dustmann and Costas Meghir
- W00/22: The effect of school quality on educational attainment and wages

- Lorraine Dearden, Javier Ferri and Costas Meghir
- W00/21: Patents, productivity and market value: evidence from a panel of UK firms

- Nicholas Bloom and John van Reenen
- W00/20: Wealth inequality in the United States and Great Britain

- James Banks, Richard Blundell and James Smith
- W00/19: A finite sample correction for the variance of linear two-step GMM estimators

- Frank Windmeijer
- W00/18: Progressivity comparisons

- Valentino Dardoni and Peter Lambert,
- W00/17: Crime and economic incentives

- Stephen Machin and Costas Meghir
- W00/16: Comparing in-work benefits and financial work incentives for low-income families in the US and the UK

- Mike Brewer
- W00/15: The dynamic effects of real options and irreversibility on investment and labour demand

- Nicholas Bloom
- W00/14: Household portfolios in the UK

- James Banks and Tanner, Tanner
- W00/13: The abolition of the earnings rule for UK pensioners

- Richard Disney and Tanner, Tanner
- W00/12: Estimation in dynamic panel data models: improving on the performance of the standard GMM estimator

- Richard Blundell, Stephen Bond and Frank Windmeijer
- W00/11: A recursive algorithm to generate piecewise linear budget contraints

- Alan Duncan and Graham Stark
- W00/10: What do we learn from recall consumption data?

- Erich Battistin, Raffaele Miniaci and Guglielmo Weber
- W00/09: Functional literacy, educational attainment and earnings - evidence from the international adult literacy survey

- Kevin Denny, Colm Harmon and Sandra Redmond
- W00/08: The impacts of education and training on the labour market experiences of young adults

- Kevin Denny and Colm Harmon
- W00/07: New methods for comparing literacy across populations: insights from the measurement of poverty

- Kevin Denny
- W00/06: Education policy reform and the return to schooling from instrumental variables

- Kevin Denny and Colm Harmon
- W00/05: Direct estimation of policy impacts

- Hidehiko Ichimura and Christopher Taber
- W00/04: Who gains when workers train? Training and corporate productivity in a panel of British industries

- John van Reenen
- W00/03: Identifying demand for health resources using waiting times information

- Richard Blundell and Frank Windmeijer
- W00/02: Mapping the two faces of R&D: productivity growth in a panel of OECD industries

- Rachel Griffith, Stephen Redding and John van Reenen
- W00/01: Optimal taxation and risk sharing

- Hamish Low and Daniel Maldoom