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LARGER FUNDING CUTS FOR SCHOOLS IN POOR AREAS LEAVE THEM Schools serving more deprived pupils face major challenges over the next few years. Educational inequalities will have widened during lockdown. Planned increases in teacher starting salaries will also weigh more heavily on such schools, given they are more likely to employ new teachers. Schools serving more deprived pupils in England have already seen the largest falls in spending THE CAREERS AND TIME USE OF MOTHERS AND FATHERS Gender gaps in employment, working hours and wages open up in earnest after workers become parents. At this point, far more mothers than fathers stop paid work or switch to part-time work while taking on the majority of the childcare. THE IMPACT OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES ON LIFETIME EARNINGS Is university a good investment? Going to university is a very good investment for most students. Over their working lives, men will be 130,000 better off on average by going to university after taxes, student loan repayments and foregone earnings are taken into account. For women, this figure is £100,000. (These and other numbers are in “discounted present FINANCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC FOR1 Older people have been severely affected by the coronavirus pandemic in terms of their health and mortality, but less focus has been given to the financial impact on older adults. Using new data from the COVID-19 questionnaire of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), we investigate how adults in their 50s and older have been affected financially by the pandemic. We find that INEQUALITIES IN EDUCATION, SKILLS, AND INCOMES IN THE UK The changes that British society and the economy have experienced since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic are some of the most unexpected and profound seen since World War II. THE FISCAL POLICY RESPONSE TO COVID-19 Short-term hit to the public finances. Direct cost of package £12 billion in 2020–21. Reduced growth. for illustration: 1ppt off growth adds around £12bn to borrowing SCOTTISH ELECTION 2021 INEQUALITY: THE IFS DEATON REVIEW Inequalities are at the forefront of today’s public and policy debates. They have been linked to some of the most important political events and have sparked worldwide protest movements. WHEN SHOULD INDIVIDUALS SAVE FOR RETIREMENT? PREDICTIONS Most individuals need to save privately for retirement if they are to maintain their living standards when they stop working. There has been lots of research and discussion on how much individuals need to save, and how this compares with the saving being encouraged through automatic enrolment into workplace pensions. However, there has been little discussion of when individuals THE EFFECTS OF CORONAVIRUS ON HOUSEHOLD FINANCES AND The effects of coronavirus on household finances and financial distress Pascale Bourquin, Isaac Delestre, Robert Joyce, Imran Rasuland Tom Waters
LARGER FUNDING CUTS FOR SCHOOLS IN POOR AREAS LEAVE THEM Schools serving more deprived pupils face major challenges over the next few years. Educational inequalities will have widened during lockdown. Planned increases in teacher starting salaries will also weigh more heavily on such schools, given they are more likely to employ new teachers. Schools serving more deprived pupils in England have already seen the largest falls in spending THE CAREERS AND TIME USE OF MOTHERS AND FATHERS Gender gaps in employment, working hours and wages open up in earnest after workers become parents. At this point, far more mothers than fathers stop paid work or switch to part-time work while taking on the majority of the childcare. THE IMPACT OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES ON LIFETIME EARNINGS Is university a good investment? Going to university is a very good investment for most students. Over their working lives, men will be 130,000 better off on average by going to university after taxes, student loan repayments and foregone earnings are taken into account. For women, this figure is £100,000. (These and other numbers are in “discounted present SCOTTISH ELECTION 2021 This year, for the first time and co-funded by the Scottish Policy Foundation, the Institute for Fiscal Studies is publishing a range of Scottish Election Briefing Notes on tax, benefits and public spending, and the parties' plans for the coming parliamentary term.TAXES EXPLAINED
Income tax explained. Income tax is the single most important source of revenue for the UK Treasury. It is forecast to raise around £200 billion in 2021–22 – about a quarter of all government taxreceipts.
WHERE DOES THE GOVERNMENT GET ITS MONEY? In 2021–22, total UK government revenue is forecast to be £819 billion, or 36% of gross domestic productGross domestic product (GDP) is a measure of an economy’s size. It is the monetary value of all market production in a particular area (usually a country) in a given period (usually a yearKEY QUESTIONS
Impartial answers to big questions on how the government raises and spends money, how taxes affect people and businesses, how taxes could be improved and much more. IFS SPENDING COMPOSITION SHEET A spreadsheet with a breakdown of UK government spending since 1955. IFS revenue composition spreadsheet. A spreadsheet with total UK government revenues since 1946 and a breakdown of revenues since 1978. NATIONAL INSURANCE CONTRIBUTIONS EXPLAINED National Insurance contributions (NICs) are the UK’s second-biggest tax, expected to raise almost £150 billion in 2021–22 – about 20%of all tax revenue.
WE NEED BETTER-INFORMED DEBATES ABOUT TAX 1 day ago · Visit the IFS TaxLab site now >>> Taxes are often the subject of debate; that is as it should be. But those debates need to be well-informed to produce sensible policy outcomes. This will be even more important in coming years as we see debates on whether – and, if so, how – to raise taxes to pay, for example, for additional health and social care for an ageing population, and the DATA HUB | IFS TAXLAB Interactive charts and downloadable data on revenues, spending, tax rates and thresholds, distributional effects and much more. Data hub contains all charts and tables used in Taxlab. HOW HAVE GOVERNMENT REVENUES CHANGED OVER TIME? Tax revenue has been stable for two decades but is forecast to rise to historical highs. UK tax revenue is forecast to total £732 billion in 2021–22, equivalent to 32.3% of gross domestic product Gross domestic product (GDP) is a measure of an economy’s size. It is the monetary value of all market production in a particular area (usually a country) in a given period (usually a year). SHOULD INCOME TAX AND NATIONAL INSURANCE BE MERGED? The UK has two taxes on income. Though different in origin, income tax and National Insurance contributions (NICs) are now very similar. The link between NICs and benefit entitlements is now vanishingly weak. Maintaining two separate taxes yields little SCOTTISH ELECTION 2021 THE FISCAL POLICY RESPONSE TO COVID-19 Short-term hit to the public finances. Direct cost of package £12 billion in 2020–21. Reduced growth. for illustration: 1ppt off growth adds around £12bn to borrowing FINANCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC FOR Older people have been severely affected by the coronavirus pandemic in terms of their health and mortality, but less focus has been given to the financial impact on older adults. Using new data from the COVID-19 questionnaire of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), we investigate how adults in their 50s and older have been affected financially by the pandemic. We find that SPENDING AND SAVING DURING THE COVID-19 CRISIS: EVIDENCE The measures taken to help reduce the spread of COVID-19, resulting from both policy and consumers’ changes in behaviour, have had major impacts on consumer spending patterns. In this briefing note, we explore how consumer spending has evolved, both during lockdown and in the recovery phase since. We document how different sectors of the economy have fared, and look at how LOCAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE Local government finance. Much of the power to raise taxes and allocate public spending is held by central government. However, some powers are delegated to local authorities. The IFS has analysed tax and spending at these local levels, both to inform policy and address more fundamental questions about the effects of local tax and spending SAVINGS, PENSIONS AND WEALTH Savings, pensions and wealth. The ageing population is causing fundamental change in the retirement savings landscape in the UK. The state has rolled back from providing earnings-related state pensions in retirement, and the private sector has all but ceased providing Defined Benefit (DB) pensions. Public sector workers continue to enjoyDB
THE TIME TO SAVE FOR YOUR PENSION IS IN YOUR 50S, NOT IN We are told some things so often that they seem like common sense. To be accepted, not to be questioned. Take pensions. For years it was the received wisdom that we weren’t saving enough for them. That we should start early, put in as much as possible and as young as possible to benefit from the magic of compound interest. That women put far less into their pensions then men. THE IMPACT OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES ON LIFETIME EARNINGS Accordingly, the causal effect of undergraduate degrees on earnings grows after age 30 for both men and women, but much more strongly for men. Average pre-tax returns for men at a given age increase from around 5% on average at age 30 to more than 30% on average at age 40, after which they increase more slowly to reach around 35% from age 50. THE GROWING SIZE OF INHERITANCES IS SET TO REDUCE SOCIAL Inheritances have been growing as a share of national income in the UK since the 1970s. That trend looks set to continue: older generations hold more wealth than their predecessors and younger generations have incomes no higher than the generations born just before them. As a result, inheritances will be an increasingly important part of lifetime income and wealth. New IFS research, released REVALUATION AND REFORM: BRINGING COUNCIL TAX IN ENGLAND Council tax matters. It matters to local government as, at over £31 billion a year, it now makes up over half of its funding for non-education expenditure. It matters for households, for whom the bills take up an average of over 3% of their income. And it matters to central government, which is ultimately responsible for the sustainability and suitability of the local government finance SCOTTISH ELECTION 2021 THE FISCAL POLICY RESPONSE TO COVID-19 Short-term hit to the public finances. Direct cost of package £12 billion in 2020–21. Reduced growth. for illustration: 1ppt off growth adds around £12bn to borrowing FINANCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC FOR Older people have been severely affected by the coronavirus pandemic in terms of their health and mortality, but less focus has been given to the financial impact on older adults. Using new data from the COVID-19 questionnaire of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), we investigate how adults in their 50s and older have been affected financially by the pandemic. We find that SPENDING AND SAVING DURING THE COVID-19 CRISIS: EVIDENCE The measures taken to help reduce the spread of COVID-19, resulting from both policy and consumers’ changes in behaviour, have had major impacts on consumer spending patterns. In this briefing note, we explore how consumer spending has evolved, both during lockdown and in the recovery phase since. We document how different sectors of the economy have fared, and look at how LOCAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE Local government finance. Much of the power to raise taxes and allocate public spending is held by central government. However, some powers are delegated to local authorities. The IFS has analysed tax and spending at these local levels, both to inform policy and address more fundamental questions about the effects of local tax and spending SAVINGS, PENSIONS AND WEALTH Savings, pensions and wealth. The ageing population is causing fundamental change in the retirement savings landscape in the UK. The state has rolled back from providing earnings-related state pensions in retirement, and the private sector has all but ceased providing Defined Benefit (DB) pensions. Public sector workers continue to enjoyDB
THE TIME TO SAVE FOR YOUR PENSION IS IN YOUR 50S, NOT IN We are told some things so often that they seem like common sense. To be accepted, not to be questioned. Take pensions. For years it was the received wisdom that we weren’t saving enough for them. That we should start early, put in as much as possible and as young as possible to benefit from the magic of compound interest. That women put far less into their pensions then men. THE IMPACT OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES ON LIFETIME EARNINGS Accordingly, the causal effect of undergraduate degrees on earnings grows after age 30 for both men and women, but much more strongly for men. Average pre-tax returns for men at a given age increase from around 5% on average at age 30 to more than 30% on average at age 40, after which they increase more slowly to reach around 35% from age 50. THE GROWING SIZE OF INHERITANCES IS SET TO REDUCE SOCIAL Inheritances have been growing as a share of national income in the UK since the 1970s. That trend looks set to continue: older generations hold more wealth than their predecessors and younger generations have incomes no higher than the generations born just before them. As a result, inheritances will be an increasingly important part of lifetime income and wealth. New IFS research, released REVALUATION AND REFORM: BRINGING COUNCIL TAX IN ENGLAND Council tax matters. It matters to local government as, at over £31 billion a year, it now makes up over half of its funding for non-education expenditure. It matters for households, for whom the bills take up an average of over 3% of their income. And it matters to central government, which is ultimately responsible for the sustainability and suitability of the local government finance HOMEPAGE - INSTITUTE FOR FISCAL STUDIES - IFS Homepage - Institute For Fiscal Studies - IFS. Our goal at the Institute for Fiscal Studies is to promote effective economic and social policies by better understanding how policies affect individuals, families, businesses and the government's finances. SPENDING AND SAVING DURING THE COVID-19 CRISIS: EVIDENCE The measures taken to help reduce the spread of COVID-19, resulting from both policy and consumers’ changes in behaviour, have had major impacts on consumer spending patterns. In this briefing note, we explore how consumer spending has evolved, both during lockdown and in the recovery phase since. We document how different sectors of the economy have fared, and look at how INEQUALITIES IN EDUCATION, SKILLS, AND INCOMES IN THE UK The changes that British society and the economy have experienced since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic are some of the most unexpected and profound seen since World War II. THE EFFECT OF THE PANDEMIC ON RETIREMENT EXPECTATIONS 1 day ago · The COVID-19 pandemic has hit the finances of many households. For older workers the financial shock risks being felt into and through retirement. In new research published today, data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing COVID-19 Substudy were used to examine the perceptions of people in their late 50s and over, in terms of the effect of the crisis on both their current income and PREPARING FOR A PANDEMIC: SPENDING DYNAMICS AND PANIC In times of heightened uncertainty, consumers face incentives to build up precautionary stocks of essential supplies. We study consumer spending dynamics during one such time, the first infection wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, using household scanner data covering fast-moving consumer goods in the United Kingdom. We document large increases in demand for storable products, such as HOW ARE MOTHERS AND FATHERS BALANCING WORK AND FAMILY The COVID-19 crisis has caused drastic changes to most parents’ work lives and other responsibilities. Millions of adults have lost or are forecast to lose their jobs permanently; many more have stopped work temporarily. Others are newly working from home, while many key workers are experiencing additional pressures and risks in their work. For most parents, school and childcare HOW SHOULD FISCAL POLICY RESPOND TO THE CORONAVIRUS (COVID It looks likely that responding to the coronavirus outbreak (covid-19) will be at the centre of Wednesday’s Budget. The scale, and therefore impact, of the virus remains hugely uncertain, so policymaking is difficult. Policies need to be robust to different eventualities and/or be flexible in the face of change. The key focus of an economic policy response should be to ensure continued THE TREASURY ISN’T TRYING TO WIN A POPULARITY CONTEST, NOR Why is the Treasury such a bunch of b*stards? That will be the question on many people’s lips after last week’s announcement that it is willing to cough up only £1.4 billion to help to fix the crisis in education precipitated by Covid. That’s just a tenth of the £15 billion said to have been requested by Sir Kevan Collins, thegovernment’s own
ADMINISTRATION TAX RECORDS FROM THE RWANDA REVENUE As part of their research on tax systems, IFS researchers use administrative tax records at the firm or individual level, either on their own or linked via de-identified unique taxpayer and firm IDs. The text below describes why the data are needed and how long researchers need to store the data. The data In the process of administering taxes, the Rwanda Revenue Authority collects tax HM TREASURY: STINGY AND SHORT-SIGHTED, OR PRUDENT AND The government has been widely criticised this week, after the announcement of £1.4 billion in schools catch-up funding led to the resignation of Sir Kevan Collins, the government’s ‘Education Recovery Commissioner’ (who was seeking a figure ten times larger). The Treasury in particular has been singled out for being stingy, whenhuge sums have
FINANCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC FOR Older people have been severely affected by the coronavirus pandemic in terms of their health and mortality, but less focus has been given to the financial impact on older adults. Using new data from the COVID-19 questionnaire of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), we investigate how adults in their 50s and older have been affected financially by the pandemic. We find that SCOTTISH ELECTION 2021 ARE SOME ETHNIC GROUPS MORE VULNERABLE TO COVID-19 THAN The COVID-19 pandemic has affected some sections of the population more than others, and there are growing concerns that the UK’s minority ethnic groups are being disproportionately affected. Following evidence that minority groups are over-represented in hospitalisations and deaths from the virus, Public Health England has launched an inquiry into the issue. In the short term, ethnic LOCAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE Local government finance. Much of the power to raise taxes and allocate public spending is held by central government. However, some powers are delegated to local authorities. The IFS has analysed tax and spending at these local levels, both to inform policy and address more fundamental questions about the effects of local tax and spending LARGER FUNDING CUTS FOR SCHOOLS IN POOR AREAS LEAVE THEM Schools serving more deprived pupils face major challenges over the next few years. Educational inequalities will have widened during lockdown. Planned increases in teacher starting salaries will also weigh more heavily on such schools, given they are more likely to employ new teachers. Schools serving more deprived pupils in England have already seen the largest falls in spending THE IMPACT OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES ON LIFETIME EARNINGS Accordingly, the causal effect of undergraduate degrees on earnings grows after age 30 for both men and women, but much more strongly for men. Average pre-tax returns for men at a given age increase from around 5% on average at age 30 to more than 30% on average at age 40, after which they increase more slowly to reach around 35% from age 50. THE GROWING SIZE OF INHERITANCES IS SET TO REDUCE SOCIAL Inheritances have been growing as a share of national income in the UK since the 1970s. That trend looks set to continue: older generations hold more wealth than their predecessors and younger generations have incomes no higher than the generations born just before them. As a result, inheritances will be an increasingly important part of lifetime income and wealth. New IFS research, released FINANCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC FOR Older people have been severely affected by the coronavirus pandemic in terms of their health and mortality, but less focus has been given to the financial impact on older adults. Using new data from the COVID-19 questionnaire of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), we investigate how adults in their 50s and older have been affected financially by the pandemic. We find that SCOTTISH ELECTION 2021 ARE SOME ETHNIC GROUPS MORE VULNERABLE TO COVID-19 THAN The COVID-19 pandemic has affected some sections of the population more than others, and there are growing concerns that the UK’s minority ethnic groups are being disproportionately affected. Following evidence that minority groups are over-represented in hospitalisations and deaths from the virus, Public Health England has launched an inquiry into the issue. In the short term, ethnic LOCAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE Local government finance. Much of the power to raise taxes and allocate public spending is held by central government. However, some powers are delegated to local authorities. The IFS has analysed tax and spending at these local levels, both to inform policy and address more fundamental questions about the effects of local tax and spending LARGER FUNDING CUTS FOR SCHOOLS IN POOR AREAS LEAVE THEM Schools serving more deprived pupils face major challenges over the next few years. Educational inequalities will have widened during lockdown. Planned increases in teacher starting salaries will also weigh more heavily on such schools, given they are more likely to employ new teachers. Schools serving more deprived pupils in England have already seen the largest falls in spending THE IMPACT OF UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES ON LIFETIME EARNINGS Accordingly, the causal effect of undergraduate degrees on earnings grows after age 30 for both men and women, but much more strongly for men. Average pre-tax returns for men at a given age increase from around 5% on average at age 30 to more than 30% on average at age 40, after which they increase more slowly to reach around 35% from age 50. THE GROWING SIZE OF INHERITANCES IS SET TO REDUCE SOCIAL Inheritances have been growing as a share of national income in the UK since the 1970s. That trend looks set to continue: older generations hold more wealth than their predecessors and younger generations have incomes no higher than the generations born just before them. As a result, inheritances will be an increasingly important part of lifetime income and wealth. New IFS research, released PREPARING FOR A PANDEMIC: SPENDING DYNAMICS AND PANIC In times of heightened uncertainty, consumers face incentives to build up precautionary stocks of essential supplies. We study consumer spending dynamics during one such time, the first infection wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, using household scanner data covering fast-moving consumer goods in the United Kingdom. We document large increases in demand for storable products, such as THE EFFECT OF THE PANDEMIC ON RETIREMENT EXPECTATIONS 9 hours ago · The COVID-19 pandemic has hit the finances of many households. For older workers the financial shock risks being felt into and through retirement. In new research published today, data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing COVID-19 Substudy were used to examine the perceptions of people in their late 50s and over, in terms of the effect of the crisis on both their current income and INEQUALITIES IN EDUCATION, SKILLS, AND INCOMES IN THE UK The changes that British society and the economy have experienced since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic are some of the most unexpected and profound seen since World War II. INEQUALITY: THE IFS DEATON REVIEW Inequalities are at the forefront of today’s public and policy debates. They have been linked to some of the most important political events and have sparked worldwide protest movements. THE TREASURY ISN’T TRYING TO WIN A POPULARITY CONTEST, NOR Why is the Treasury such a bunch of b*stards? That will be the question on many people’s lips after last week’s announcement that it is willing to cough up only £1.4 billion to help to fix the crisis in education precipitated by Covid. That’s just a tenth of the £15 billion said to have been requested by Sir Kevan Collins, thegovernment’s own
CATCHING UP OR FALLING BEHIND? GEOGRAPHICAL INEQUALITIES The COVID-19 crisis has brought to the fore increasing concerns about inequalities not only between different population groups – such as the gap between the rich and poor, young and old, and different ethnic groups – but also between people living in different places. Even prior to the crisis though, there was a sense that the UK is not only a highly geographically unequal country THE GROWING SIZE OF INHERITANCES IS SET TO REDUCE SOCIAL Inheritances have been growing as a share of national income in the UK since the 1970s. That trend looks set to continue: older generations hold more wealth than their predecessors and younger generations have incomes no higher than the generations born just before them. As a result, inheritances will be an increasingly important part of lifetime income and wealth. New IFS research, released THE FOUR-HOUR NHS WAITING TIME TARGET SAVES LIVES The national Accident and Emergency (A&E) four-hour waiting time target is once again in the news headlines. Performance against this recently fell to the lowest since records began, with only 79.8% of patients in December 2019 admitted, discharged or transferred to another hospital within 4 hours as opposed to the 95% standard. Recent comments from the Health Secretary Matt Hancock THE CHARACTERISTICS AND INCOMES OF THE TOP 1% The richest members of our society get a lot of attention. Much of the public conversation about economic inequality is concerned with, loosely, the top 1%, how different they are from the rest, how they got to where they are, and what – if anything – policy should do about it. It is also a fact that this group is extremely important for the funding of our public services and UNIVERSAL CREDIT AND ITS IMPACT ON HOUSEHOLD INCOMES: THE In this research we investigate who wins and loses from universal credit, and by how much. For the first time, we also look at the effects of universal credit on people’s incomes over eight years of their lives, rather than just at a point in time. This lets us look at the impact on those that are persistently, rather than temporarily, low income. Universal credit and the working-age This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on ourwebsite. Learn more
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Socioeconomic inequalities in mortality were growing for adults pre-pandemic, but falling for young children 04 Jun 2021 | Press release This study, which exploits publicly available data on mortality, populations and deprivation in England, examines mortality inequalities at different ages and whether changes over time come from the richest, the middle or the poorest areas changing at differentrates.
HM Treasury: stingy and short-sighted, or prudent and practical? 04 Jun 2021 | Observation In this observation we look at the arguments to consider when assessing the recently announced £1.4bn schools catch-up funding. Can the NHS recover from COVID? 02 Jun 2021 | Podcast We discuss COVID's impact on the NHS with Associate Director George Stoye and Saffron Cordery, Deputy Chief Executive of NHS Providers. Even high-achieving pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds miss out on some university opportunities – but mentoring programmes can help 27 May 2021 | Observation New IFS research, published today in two reports, suggests that a combined programme of mentorship, networking and practical support can help talented but disadvantaged young people to access top-tieruniversities.
Our goal at the Institute for Fiscal Studies is to promote effective economic and social policies by better understanding how policies affect individuals, families, businesses and the government'sfinances.
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Upcoming event
Understanding the changing patterns of work at older agesDate
17 June 2021 | 13:30 - 14:45Location
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At this event, featuring a speech by the Minister for Employment, IFS researchers will present their findings from a new report that seeks to shed new light on the working lives of people in their 50s and 60s, and discuss the key implications for the future.Upcoming event
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Our annual event for IFS members will take place online this year, giving our supporters an exclusive insight into the work going on behind the scenes at the institute and providing an opportunity to ask questions directly to senior researchers.OLDER ARTICLES
A survey of the Ghanaian tax system 25 May 2021 | Report In this report with the Ministry of Finance, Ghana, we provide a comprehensive overview of Ghana’s tax system. The time to save for your pension is in your 50s, not in hard-upyouth
24 May 2021 | Newspaper In his latest column for The Times, Paul Johnson looks at retirementsaving.
COVID-related spending on education in England 20 May 2021 | Briefing Note This briefing note describes the range and level of COVID-related spending on education in England. Are too many people going to university? 19 May 2021 | Podcast This week, we speak with Jack Britton, IFS education expert, and Professor Alison Wolf, Kings College London, to find out whether too many people are going to university. What happened to English NHS hospital activity during the COVID-19pandemic?
13 May 2021 | Briefing Note In this briefing note, we use administrative hospital data from across the NHS in England to describe how the use of inpatient (elective and emergency) and outpatient hospital care in 2020 compared with that inthe previous year.
Life-cycle patterns in pension saving 11 May 2021 | Briefing Note In an ongoing programme of research, we examine in detail how pension saving might be expected to change over working life, and how employees and the self-employed behave in practice. NEWS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS14 Apr 2021
IFS Research Director Rachel Griffith delivers RES Past President'sAddress
29 Mar 2021
IFS Director Paul Johnson joins new Times Education Commission12 Mar 2021
IFS Director Paul Johnson to lead Stormont tax powers reviewcommission
10 Mar 2021
Rachel Griffith joins new Discover Economics 'How Did I Get Here?'podcast series
31 Dec 2020
IFS Research Director Rachel Griffith made a Dame in New Year'sHonours
31 Dec 2020
IFS Research Fellow Carol Propper made a Dame in New Year’s HonoursWORKING PAPERS
IFS Working Paper W21/13 Revisiting the solution of dynamic discrete choice models: time to bring back Keane and Wolpin (1994)? IFS Working Paper W21/12 Why do couples and singles save during retirement? IFS Working Paper W21/11 The gender gap in household bargaining power: a portfolio-choiceapproach
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