This report argues that existing gender inequality is being further entrenched as Australian women are receiving less benefit from tax cuts and shouldering more of the costs of service cuts. Summary Successive governments have made large changes in taxation and spending measures that have disproportionately affected women. Men have benefitted most from tax cuts while the cuts to services have primarily impacted on women - a double disadvantage. Before the Global Financial Crisis, income tax cuts were a key feature of fiscal policy for successive Federal Governments. These tax cuts cost the Budget $169 billion from 2005 to 2012. This fall in revenue has created what the current Government refers to as a ‘budget emergency’ and has been use...
The paper reviews the gender-differentiated effect of macro-economic policies by examining the impac...
Pay inequity costs the Australian economy $93 billion per year, or 8.5% of GDP, according to this re...
This report argues that the government would have had an additional $38 billion for last year\u27s ...
Gender inequality is profoundly unjust and in clear contradiction to the philosophy of the ‘fair go’...
Gender inequality is profoundly unjust and in clear contradiction to the philosophy of the ‘fair go’...
It has been the practice for over thirty years for Federal Governments to produce a Women’s Budget S...
In the 1980s the Australian Personal Income Tax was highly progressive and family payments were univ...
This article discusses the concept of gender-responsive budgeting articulated by feminist political...
Last week’s Spring Budget failed to reverse a series of cuts that effectively take away money from p...
Tax, Social Policy and Gender presents new research on entrenched gender inequality in a comparative...
April 2011 will see the implementation of many areas of the government’s deficit reduction strategy....
Officials developing government budgets often assume that taxing and spending decisions will be gend...
The Equalities Impact Assessment (EIA) conducted for the 2011 Budget, while a welcome development gi...
Women have made great progress in gaining individual civil and political rights since the 1800s. How...
International audienceThe tax and benefit system probably affects men and women differently because ...
The paper reviews the gender-differentiated effect of macro-economic policies by examining the impac...
Pay inequity costs the Australian economy $93 billion per year, or 8.5% of GDP, according to this re...
This report argues that the government would have had an additional $38 billion for last year\u27s ...
Gender inequality is profoundly unjust and in clear contradiction to the philosophy of the ‘fair go’...
Gender inequality is profoundly unjust and in clear contradiction to the philosophy of the ‘fair go’...
It has been the practice for over thirty years for Federal Governments to produce a Women’s Budget S...
In the 1980s the Australian Personal Income Tax was highly progressive and family payments were univ...
This article discusses the concept of gender-responsive budgeting articulated by feminist political...
Last week’s Spring Budget failed to reverse a series of cuts that effectively take away money from p...
Tax, Social Policy and Gender presents new research on entrenched gender inequality in a comparative...
April 2011 will see the implementation of many areas of the government’s deficit reduction strategy....
Officials developing government budgets often assume that taxing and spending decisions will be gend...
The Equalities Impact Assessment (EIA) conducted for the 2011 Budget, while a welcome development gi...
Women have made great progress in gaining individual civil and political rights since the 1800s. How...
International audienceThe tax and benefit system probably affects men and women differently because ...
The paper reviews the gender-differentiated effect of macro-economic policies by examining the impac...
Pay inequity costs the Australian economy $93 billion per year, or 8.5% of GDP, according to this re...
This report argues that the government would have had an additional $38 billion for last year\u27s ...