Skip to main content

POLIS

  • Home
  • About
    • Annual report
  • People
    • Director
    • Management committee
    • Staff
    • Adjuncts
    • Visitors
    • Current HDR students
    • Scientific Advisory Board
  • Events
    • CSRM Seminar series
    • Citizen Social series
    • Conferences & workshops
      • Past conferences & workshops
  • News
    • In the media
  • ASPA
    • 2025 Australian Social Policy HDR Conference
    • Australian Journal of Social issues
    • Australian Social Policy Conference
    • Contact us
  • WAPOR
  • Education & training
    • POLIS Courses on offer
    • Undergraduate programs
    • Graduate programs
    • Honours
    • Higher degree by research
    • Executive courses
  • Programs & research
    • Australian Data Archive
    • Criminology
    • Centre for Gambling Research
      • Current projects
      • Past projects & outcomes
      • Media & Resources
    • Research Methods
    • PolicyMod
    • Social Policy
    • Surveys
      • ANUPoll
        • Methodologya
        • Contact ANUpoll
    • Evaluations
    • Transnational Research Institute on Corruption
      • TRIC Award for Anti-Corruption Research
      • The Corruption Agenda
      • Anti-corruption conferences and forums
      • Research
      • Corruption Studies
      • Resources
      • Contact us
    • Research projects
      • Manning cost-benefit tool
      • Routledge Wellbeing Handbook
      • SOAR
      • QRN
      • NT Gambling project
      • FaCtS Study
      • PELab
      • Evaluation of Narragunnawali
      • OxCGRT Australian Subnational dataset
      • Post Separation Parenting Apps
  • Publications
    • Working papers
    • Methods research papers
    • COVID-19 publications
    • Other publications
  • Contact us

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program
  • ANU Jobs

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeUpcoming EventsA New Look At The Distribution and Determinants of Income In Australia: Evidence From Linked Tax, Social Security and Census Data
A new look at the distribution and determinants of income in Australia: Evidence from linked tax, social security and Census data

Recently, the Australian Bureau of Statistics has been leading the Multi-Agency Data Integration Project (MADIP). This project involves linking of data from the Census to administrative data from three sources - an individual tax payer database, an income support database, and a government-funded health services database. This unique database has only just been made available (in a deidentified format) to external academic researchers. This paper provides a first external analysis of the linked dataset, with the following substantive and methodological focuses:

  • The background to MADIP and the four component datasets (the Census, and the three administrative datasets);
  • The linkage process and the quality of the linked data;
  • What can the data tell us about the distribution of income in Australia, taking into account taxable income and income-support status;
  • Mobility across the income distribution, and how that relates to demographic and geographic characteristics;
  • Whether there are differences by race and ethnicity in taxable income, controlling for observable human capital characteristics; and
  • The implications for linkage of large survey datasets to administrative databases, including the policy recommendations that might result.

Date & time

  • Wed 14 Nov 2018, 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm

Location

Jean Martin Room, Level 3 Beryl Rawson Building

Speakers

  • A/Prof Nicholas Biddle

Event Series

CSRM Seminar series

Contact

  •  Maddie LeLievre
     Send email
     61251301