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Areas of research covered include Public Finance and spending, Pensions and saving, Company Taxation , consumer behaviour and Poverty and Inequality . The Institute for Fiscal Studies has hosted an ESRC research centre since 1991 . Following an open competition for research funding, the ESRC decided to renew Centre funding from April 2005 for a period of five years. The Centre for the Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy (CPP) carries out core analytical research that will allow informed microeconomic analysis of major public policy issues, from productivity growth to poverty reduction, and from promoting employment to ensuring sound public finances. Its focus is on the careful modelling of individual, household and firm behaviour, combining cutting-edge empirical analysis with detailed understanding of policy options and implementation. The Centre is directed by Professor Richard Blundell and co-directors, Professor Orazio Attanasio , Dr Steve Bond, Dr Rachel Griffith, Professor Costas Meghir and Robert Chote . The research takes place within the team-based environment at IFS, providing advanced training for young researchers. The Centre acts as a national resource for analysis of emerging policy challenges and draws on extensive collaboration with leading researchers in the UK, Europe, North America and the developing world. We have an established record of effective dissemination to and interaction with policymakers, civil society, the business community, academics and the general public - and we continually seek to broaden and strengthen those links. Complementing the policy-based research, IFS also hosts a centre, the Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice (cemmap), for the development of evaluation methodology and other econometric and statistical methods. cemmap, which builds on the strengths developed at the ESRC Centre, is funded by the Leverhulme Trust and will be funded by the ESRC from 2007 . This has further strengthened IFS's commitment to evidence-based policy and to the development of suitable research methods in parallel with our empirical analysis. Although most of the research is UK based, recent work also looks at international development policies, for instance at education and nutrition programmes in Colombia. Centre for the Evaluation of Development Studies HISTORY OF THE IFS The Institute for Fiscal Studies came into existence because four professional people from the world of finance — a banker (Will Hopper), an investment trust manager (Bob Buist), a stockbroker (Nils Taube) and a tax consultant (John Chown) — were appalled by the way in which the 1965 Finance Act, introducing capital gains tax, reached the Statute Book. James Callaghan (Labour Chancellor at the time) had made a speech announcing his intentions to make far-reaching changes to the tax system in his next Budget, including a capital gains tax and a corporation tax. Nils Taube commissioned John Chown to prepare a professional analysis of this speech. Despite his warnings about the dire consequences of implementation of the government’s proposals they stood, John Chown was dismayed to find that “the same half-baked proposals were rehashed in the Budget Speech, and the Finance Bill, when published, read as if the draftsman had simply been given the Callaghan speech and been told to turn it into legislation.” They discovered that they were united in a determination, as John Chown puts it, “that never again should a government, regardless of its political colour and intentions, introduce far-reaching tax legislation without the benefit of deep and thorough analysis of its second- and third-order effects.” Will Hopper recalls that the idea of a research institute did not take shape until some time later at “a dinner which was attended by Bob Buist, John Chown, Nils Taube and me on 30 July 1968 at the Stella Alpina restaurant, 32 North Audley Street, London W1 at which a decision was made to found our Institute. The actual date of birth was 21 May 1969 when it was incorporated — appropriately enough just over nine months later. As well as research, the Institute had wider, unspoken objectives. The founders did not just want to start an Institute; they wanted to change the world or, at least, to change the world of the British fisc. In particular, they wanted: • to alter the climate of opinion within which changes to the British tax system were considered; • to improve the procedures by which changes in the tax system were effected; • to help create a more rational tax system. CHRONOLOGY 1965 Finance Bill published proposing capital gains tax Nils Taube and Bob Buist establish contact with John Chown and Will Hopper to establish tax reform 1967 Brainstorming weekend at The Bell, Aston Clinton Charter for Tax Reform published in The Times Jeremy Skinner and Halmer Hudson join group 1968 Stella Alpina dinner: decision to found Institute 1969 Institute incorporated as Company Limited by Guarantee 1970 Dick Taverne becomes Director 1971 Formation of Council with President Sir Richard Powell, Vice-Presidents Roy Jenkins and Selwyn Lloyd; Executive Committee formed. Chairman: Will Hopper; Secretary:Halmer Hudson; Members: Buist, Chown, Skinner, Taube 1972 First full-time staff appointed 1973 First Newsletter produced 1974 Institute moves form Bell Yard to Chandos Place 1975 Meade Committee starts its enquiries under James Meade 1978 Meade Report published; Institute moves to Castle Lane 1979 John Kay appointed Director of Research 1979 Fiscal Studies launched; Working Paper series launched 1980 Armstrong Report published 1982 Report series launched; First Green Budget 1984 Publication of The Reform of Social Security 1985 Institute moves to Tottenham Court Road 1986 Bill Robinson and Richard Blundell take over from Kay and Morris 1987 Capital Taxes Group established 1990 Move to Ridgmount Street 1991 Andrew Dilnot appointed Director 1991 ESRC Centre at IFS inaugurated 1984 Tax Law Review Committee established 1995 IFS web site launched SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS |
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