Displaying all 23 Publications
Current search: 'Research Paper' and 'Mike Brewer'
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What do we really know about the employment effects of the UK’s National Minimum Wage?
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Universal credit and its impact on household incomes: the long and the short of it
Mike Brewer, Robert Joyce, Tom Waters, et al.
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The return to work and how it is taxed: a dynamic perspective
Mike Brewer, Mike Brewer, Monica Costa Dias, et al.
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Progression and retention in the labour market: what have we learned from IWC and ERA?
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Refining the bootstrap methodology for HBAI statistics
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Free childcare and parents’ labour supply: is more better?
Mike Brewer, Sarah Cattan, Claire Crawford, et al.
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Free childcare and parents’ labour supply: is more better?
Mike Brewer, Sarah Cattan, Claire Crawford, et al.
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Lone parents, time-limited in-work credits and the dynamics of work and welfare
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Can’t work or won’t work: quasi-experimental evidence on work search requirements for single parents
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Can’t work or won’t work: quasi-experimental evidence on work search requirements for single parents
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Inference with difference-in-differences revisited
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Lone Parent Obligations: an impact assessment
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Lone Parent Obligations: an impact assessment: research summary
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How taxes and welfare distort work incentives: static lifecycle and dynamic perspectives
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Why are households that report the lowest incomes so well-off?
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Lifetime inequality and redistribution
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A dynamic perspective on how the UK personal tax and benefit system affects work incentives and redistributes income
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The impact of a time-limited, targeted in-work benefit in the medium-term: an evaluation of In Work Credit
Mike Brewer, James Browne, Haroon Chowdry, et al.
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An anatomy of economic inequality in the UK: report of the National Equality Panel
John Hills, Mike Brewer, Stephen P. Jenkins, et al.
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Micro-simulating child poverty in 2010 and 2020
Mike Brewer, James Browne, Robert Joyce, et al.
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Micro-simulating Child Poverty in Great Britain in 2010 and 2020
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Microsimulating Child Poverty in 2010 and 2020
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Why are households that report the lowest incomes so well-off?