Professor Stephen Pudney Visiting Professor, University of Essex
- spudney@essex.ac.uk
- Telephone
- 01206 873789
- Office
- 2N2.4.23
Research Interests
- Microeconometrics
- Poverty and the welfare benefit system
- Health and disability
- Survey measurement error
- The economics of crime and illicit drugs
- The measurement of wellbeing
Latest Blog Posts
Publications
Displaying publications 1 - 15 of 34 in total
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Using biomarkers to predict healthcare costs: evidence from a UK household panel
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Biomarkers as precursors of disability
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intcount: a command for fitting count-data models from interval data
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EQ-5D-5L versus EQ-5D-3L: the impact on cost effectiveness in the United Kingdom
Monica Hernandez-Alava, Allan Wailoo, Sabine Grimm, et al.
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Concordance of health states in couples: analysis of self-reported, nurse administered and blood-based biomarker data in the UK Understanding Society panel
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Econometric modelling of multiple self-reports of health states: the switch from EQ-5D-3L to EQ-5D-5L in evaluating drug therapies for rheumatoid arthritis
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bicop: a command for fitting bivariate ordinal regressions with residual dependence characterized by a copula function and normal mixture marginals
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Do household surveys give a coherent view of disability benefit targeting?: a multisurvey latent variable analysis for the older population in Great Britain
Ruth Hancock, Marcello Morciano, Stephen Pudney, et al.
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Birth-cohort trends in older-age functional disability and their relationship with socio-economic status: evidence from a pooling of repeated cross-sectional population-based studies for the UK
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The income gradient in childhood mental health: all in the eye of the beholder?
David W. Johnston, Carol Propper, Stephen Pudney, et al.
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Child mental health and educational attainment: multiple observers and the measurement error problem
Johnston David, Carol Propper, Stephen Pudney, et al.
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In sickness and in health? Comorbidity in older couples -conference paper abstract-
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Assessing the distributional impact of reforms to disability benefits for older people in the UK: implications of alternative measures of income and disability costs
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Disability costs and equivalence scales in the older population in Great Britain
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Popularity
Gabriella Conti, Andrea Galeotti, Gerrit Müller, et al.
Media
Displaying media publications 16 - 30 of 110 in total
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Spliffs and butts: it is high time for a new debate on drug policy but politicians remain wary
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Taxing legalised cannabis could cut deficit by £1.25 billion
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Cannabis legalisation could see use rise but potency fall
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Legalising cannabis could bring in £1.25bn
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How cannabis could cut deficit by £1.25bn
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Deficit 'could be cut by £1.25bn if cannabis was legalised and taxed'
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Legalising cannabis: the £1.25bn tax benefit;
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Legalising cannabis: £1.25bn tax benefit - without necessarily damaging public health
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Decriminalization of cannabis can reduce deficit by £1.25bn
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Making cannabis legal without spoiling public health could help ease deficit
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Cannabis tax 'worth £1.25bn'
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Weed tax 'bonanza'
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Weed tax 'bonanza'
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The Tudor pile that's home to a thinktank set on shaking up Britain's drug laws
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Taxing cannabis 'could cut deficit'