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E-raamat: New Frontiers in Microsimulation Modelling [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(University of Canberra, Australia), Edited by
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In the past fifteen years, microsimulation models have become firmly established as vital tools for analysis of the distributional impact of changes in governmental programmes. Across Europe, the US, Canada and Australia, microsimulation models are used extensively to assess who are the winners and losers from proposed policy reforms; this is now expanding into new frontiers, both geographically and in terms of policy areas. With contributions from more than 60 international experts, this volume offers a comprehensive introduction to the state of microsimulation internationally, illustrating a wide range of new applications and approaches. It will be of relevance to government policy makers, social policy planners, economists and those concerned with predicting the impact of public policy change and to academics in a variety of disciplines, especially social and public policy, human geography, development studies and economics.
Contents: Preface - Orcutt's vision 50 years on, Michael Wolfson;
Introduction, Paul Williamson,Asghar Zaidi and Ann Harding; Part I Spatial
Modelling: Moses: dynamic spatial microsimulation with demographic
interactions, Mark Birkin, Belinda Wu and Phil Rees; Small area poverty
estimates for Australia's Eastern seaboard in 2006, Robert Tanton, Justine
Mcnamara, Ann Harding and Thomas Morrison; Microsimulation as a tool in
spatial decision making: simulation of retail developments in a Dutch town,
Eveline S. van Leeuwen, Graham P. Clarke and Piet Rietveld; Time and money in
space: estimating household expenditure and time use at the small area level
in Great Britain, Ben Anderson, Paola de Agostini, Selma Laidoudi, Antonia
Weston and Ping Zong. Part II Work Incentives and Labour Supply: Work
incentives, redistribution policies and the equity-efficiency trade off:
evidence from Spain, José M. Labeaga, Xisco Oliver and Amedeo Spadaro;
Microsimulating supply/demand interactions on a labour market: a prototype,
Muriel Barlet, Didier Blanchet and Thomas Le Barbranchon; Policy swapping
across countries using EUROMOD: the case of in-work benefits in Southern
Europe, Francesco Figari; Behavioural microsimulation: labour supply and
child care use responses in Australia and Norway, Guyonne Kalb and Thor O.
Thoresen. Part III Demographic Issues, Social Security and Retirement Income:
Fertility decisions - simulation in an agent-based model (IFSIM), Elisa
Baroni, Matias Eklöf, Daniel Hallberg, Thomas Lindh and Jovan Zamac;
Projecting pensions and age at retirement in France: some lessons from the
Destinie I model, Didier Blanchet and Sylvie Le Minez; Rates of return in the
Canada pension plan: sub-populations of special policy interest and
preliminary after-tax results, Richard J. Morrison; Simulating employment
careers in the lifepaths model: validation across multiple time scales, Geoff
T. Rowe and Kevin D. Moore; Simulating earnings in dynamic microsimulation
models, C
Asghar Zaidi is Director of Research at the European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research, Vienna, Austria and Senior Economist in the Social Policy Division of the Dirctorate of Employment, Labour and Social Affairs, at the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Paris, France. He has previously worked as an Economic Advisor to the British government's Department for Work and Pensions and he contributed to the government's dynamic microsimulation model, PENSIM_II. He is Vice President of the International Microsimulation Association. Ann Harding is Professor of Applied Economics and Social Policy and Director of National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling (NATSEM) at the UNiversity of Canberra, Australia. She is an internationally recognised expert in the fields of microsimulation modelling, income distribution and tax/transfer policy, with four published books in the field, and experience of working on major policy reviews in several Federal government departments. She is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and has been President of the International Microsimulation Association since 2003. Paul Willliamson is Senior Lecturer in Geography at the University of Liverpool, UK. He is the editor of the International Journal of Microsimulation.