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

HomePublicationsOptimal Policy Modelling: a Microsimulation Methodology For Setting The Australian Tax and Transfer System
Optimal policy modelling: a microsimulation methodology for setting the Australian tax and transfer system
Optimal policy modelling: a microsimulation methodology for setting the Australian tax and transfer system
Author/editor: B Phillips, R Webster and M Gray
Published in (Monograph or Journal): CSRM Working Papers Series
Publisher: Centre for Social Research and Methods
Year published: 2018
Issue no.: 10/2018

Abstract

The complexity of the social security system makes it challenging for policy makers to assess what changes should be made to the system to achieve policy objectives, and the implications of changes to the system. This paper describes the results of an initial attempt to develop a new methodology and modelling tool for optimising the social security system to achieve a particular outcome. The illustrative case used is minimising relative income poverty. We do this by using a microsimulation approach in which we alter welfare payments (or other parameters) to minimise household poverty, subject to a range of constraints, such as the overall social security budget or relationships between payment rates. The relationship between payment rate and poverty gap is then estimated using a linear regression model that provides parameter values for an equation that describes how changes in payment rates affect the poverty gap. This equation can be used to determine ‘optimal’ payment rates, subject to constraints such as a budget constraint or changes from current payment levels.

File attachments

AttachmentSize
Optimal-policy-modelling-setting-Australian-tax-and-transfer-system-10-2018-CSRM-working-paper_0.pdf(2.96 MB)2.96 MB