This paper analyses some of the results of a survey of public opinion carried out in Ireland in the early Autumn of 1989. The survey itself was an innovation in the political economy of taxation and public spending in Ireland in that it was the first time a fully articulated exercise was mounted to establish the actual preferences of the population over specified areas of the economics of the public sector.[extract]Foundation for Fiscal StudiesUniversity College Dublin. Faculty of ArtsA hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UN
To inform public policy on tax reform, Combat Poverty commissioned Farrell-Grant-Sparks to examine t...
This paper applies the Ahmad-Stern model of indirect tax reform to the Irish economy for two differe...
This paper analyzes the role of tax policy in the transformation of the Irish economy from the 1980...
THESIS 7717This dissertation is based on two studies conducted in 2002 and 2004 analysing preference...
This paper, via the analysis of stated preferences from a nationwide representative survey of 1,100 ...
The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of the Geary Institute. All errors and omi...
This paper focuses on replication in the sense of Herrnson (1995). It re-examines the only study of ...
In the context of the current debate over standards of public services in Ireland and the appropriat...
THESIS 7892This Ph.D. thesis examines what public opinion polls undertaken in the Republic of Irelan...
Many articles examine general level preferences for redistribution. However, few articles examine pr...
In the context of the current debate over standards of public services in Ireland and the appropria...
It is difficult to measure public views on tradeoffs between spending priorities because public unde...
Many papers examine general level preferences for redistribution. However, few papers examine prefe...
In Ireland as in many other countries there has been an ongoing debate on the nature, degree and tre...
Foundation for Fiscal StudiesA hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UN
To inform public policy on tax reform, Combat Poverty commissioned Farrell-Grant-Sparks to examine t...
This paper applies the Ahmad-Stern model of indirect tax reform to the Irish economy for two differe...
This paper analyzes the role of tax policy in the transformation of the Irish economy from the 1980...
THESIS 7717This dissertation is based on two studies conducted in 2002 and 2004 analysing preference...
This paper, via the analysis of stated preferences from a nationwide representative survey of 1,100 ...
The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of the Geary Institute. All errors and omi...
This paper focuses on replication in the sense of Herrnson (1995). It re-examines the only study of ...
In the context of the current debate over standards of public services in Ireland and the appropriat...
THESIS 7892This Ph.D. thesis examines what public opinion polls undertaken in the Republic of Irelan...
Many articles examine general level preferences for redistribution. However, few articles examine pr...
In the context of the current debate over standards of public services in Ireland and the appropria...
It is difficult to measure public views on tradeoffs between spending priorities because public unde...
Many papers examine general level preferences for redistribution. However, few papers examine prefe...
In Ireland as in many other countries there has been an ongoing debate on the nature, degree and tre...
Foundation for Fiscal StudiesA hard copy is available in UCD Library at GEN 330.08 IR/UN
To inform public policy on tax reform, Combat Poverty commissioned Farrell-Grant-Sparks to examine t...
This paper applies the Ahmad-Stern model of indirect tax reform to the Irish economy for two differe...
This paper analyzes the role of tax policy in the transformation of the Irish economy from the 1980...