Peter Saunders analyses how the welfare state might be transformed to give ordinary people more control over key areas of their lives which are currently managed for them by the government. Saunders demonstates that, to a large extent, we no longer need the welfare state. Most people could afford to buy most of the services they need if they weren\u27t taxed so highly to pay for the services the government wants them to have
A large tax wedge can lead to a dramatic increase in economic efficiency. The market share of 'deadw...
Public services are dying a slow death, but what comes next? Lord Adebowale and Henry Kippin set out...
This paper takes as its starting point Henry Neuburger's injunction that taxation must be seen as a ...
The expansion of the Australian welfare state over recent decades has surprised many, especially tho...
In 2010–11, Australia’s welfare state, which includes health, education and income support payments,...
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Government in New Zealand keeps expanding. The main driver has been the inexorabl...
A guaranteed income (GI) that replaces the welfare state is not currently on the political agenda, b...
Welfare spending in the UK is too low to provide services at a level to which most citizens aspire. ...
The Chancellor of the Exchequer recently declared that Britain can no longer afford the cost of the ...
In a time when governments are running up enormous welfare bills and intrusively regulating everyday...
What happened to the welfare state in the 1980s and 1990s? Not what you might have expected, accordi...
For roughly two decades now, commentators from different political camps have pronounced the welfare...
The issue of welfare reform is made difficult because of the boundaries we traditionally (yet impli...
We compute the welfare e¤ects of di¤erent revenue-neutral tax reforms that elim-inate capital income...
during the 1930s and augmented under Lyndon Johnson during the 1960s, has been a sweeping, remarkabl...
A large tax wedge can lead to a dramatic increase in economic efficiency. The market share of 'deadw...
Public services are dying a slow death, but what comes next? Lord Adebowale and Henry Kippin set out...
This paper takes as its starting point Henry Neuburger's injunction that taxation must be seen as a ...
The expansion of the Australian welfare state over recent decades has surprised many, especially tho...
In 2010–11, Australia’s welfare state, which includes health, education and income support payments,...
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Government in New Zealand keeps expanding. The main driver has been the inexorabl...
A guaranteed income (GI) that replaces the welfare state is not currently on the political agenda, b...
Welfare spending in the UK is too low to provide services at a level to which most citizens aspire. ...
The Chancellor of the Exchequer recently declared that Britain can no longer afford the cost of the ...
In a time when governments are running up enormous welfare bills and intrusively regulating everyday...
What happened to the welfare state in the 1980s and 1990s? Not what you might have expected, accordi...
For roughly two decades now, commentators from different political camps have pronounced the welfare...
The issue of welfare reform is made difficult because of the boundaries we traditionally (yet impli...
We compute the welfare e¤ects of di¤erent revenue-neutral tax reforms that elim-inate capital income...
during the 1930s and augmented under Lyndon Johnson during the 1960s, has been a sweeping, remarkabl...
A large tax wedge can lead to a dramatic increase in economic efficiency. The market share of 'deadw...
Public services are dying a slow death, but what comes next? Lord Adebowale and Henry Kippin set out...
This paper takes as its starting point Henry Neuburger's injunction that taxation must be seen as a ...