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University of Tampere

University of Tampere

2 Projects, page 1 of 1
  • Funder: Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) Project Code: 462-14-012

    The project is a joint effort with teams in Uppsala, Essex and Tampere, and the aim of the overall project is to examine how recent challenges, such as increased economic uncertainty and ethnic diversity, have affected inequality and support for the welfare state in European countries. It also investigates the work incentives embedded in the existing tax- and benefit systems and how these affect individuals? behaviour, both in the short and in the long run. This information is a crucial input to governments? decisions on how to finance the welfare system and redistribute income while maintaining incentives to work and avoiding poverty traps. The overall project is divided into three strands. We first measure inequality developments using multidimensional and lifetime perspectives, and assess how different EU tax and benefit systems reduce economic vulnerability. Second, we investigate support for redistribution, asking how ethnic diversity affects people?s support for the welfare state and, using methods from experimental psychology, examining the determinants of redistributive attitudes for different groups. Third, we investigate the work incentives embedded in the existing tax and benefit systems and how these affect individuals? behaviour, both in the short and in the long run, taking into account issues like the complexity of the tax design. The part of research carried out by the Tampere team will mainly deal with Strand 3 of the overall plan (tax and benefit models and redistribution) for which Jukka Pirttilä serves as a coordinator. Our researchers are also responsible for Strand 1C (subjective wellbeing and redistribution).

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  • Funder: Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) Project Code: 462-14-010

    This research project examines how recent challenges, such as increased economic uncertainty and ethnic diversity, have affected inequality and support for the welfare state in European countries. It also investigates the work incentives embedded in the existing tax- and benefit systems and how these affect individuals? behaviour, both in the short and in the long run. This information is a crucial input to governments? decisions on how to finance the welfare system and redistribute income while maintaining incentives to work and avoiding poverty traps. The project is divided into three strands. We first measure inequality developments using multidimensional and lifetime perspectives, and assess how different EU tax and benefit systems reduce economic vulnerability. Second, we investigate support for redistribution, asking how ethnic diversity affects people?s support for the welfare state and, using methods from experimental psychology, examining the determinants of redistributive attitudes for different groups. Third, we investigate the work incentives embedded in the existing tax and benefit systems and how these affect individuals? behaviour, both in the short and in the long run, taking into account issues like the complexity of the tax design. The research will produce academically meritorious publications and highly policy relevant guidance on reforms to the redistributive side of the welfare state. The research will use comparative micro data across European countries and detailed register data from individual countries. The project unites economists, political scientists, sociologists and psychologists with extensive experience advising governments and the EC on policy design.

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