Stuart Adam
83 Papers
514 Citations
Stuart Adam is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tax reform & Value-added tax. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 83 publications.
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Papers
•Book
Dimensions of tax design : the Mirrlees review
James A. Mirrlees,Stuart Adam +1 more
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: Taxation in the UK: as mentioned in this paper discusses means-testing and tax rates on earnings Commentary Commentary Commentary 3. Labour Supply and Taxes 4. Value added tax and excise tax and VAT and 5. Environmental Taxes Commentary Commentary 6. The Base for Direct Taxation Commentary Commentary 7. Taxation of Wealth and Wealth Transfers 8. Taxing Corporate Income Commentary Commentary 10. International Capital Taxation 11. Small Business Taxation 12. Administration and Compliance Commentary Commentary 13. The Political Economy of Tax Policy Commentary Commentary 14.
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The Mirrlees Review: Conclusions and Recommendations for Reform†
James A. Mirrlees,Stuart Adam,Timothy Besley,Richard Blundell,Stephen Bond,Robert Chote,Malcolm Gammie,Paul Johnson,Gareth D. Myles,James M. Poterba +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a summary of the conclusions and recommendations of the Mirrlees Review of the UK tax system and a package of reforms for the UK system which will move it closer to the ideal is proposed.
Redistribution, work incentives and thirty years of UK tax and benefit reform
Stuart Adam,James Browne +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors look at how the tax and benefit system redistributed income and affected incentives to work in 2009-10, and at the effect of tax and benefits reforms between 1978-79 and 2009-2010 on the level of inequality and work incentives.
•Book
The Poverty Trade-off: Work incentives and income redistribution in Britain
Stuart Adam,Mike Brewer,Andrew Shephard +2 more
- 04 Oct 2006
TL;DR: The authors examined how work incentives vary across the population and how this has changed since 1979; estimates how far tax and benefit reforms have been responsible for changes in work incentives; compares these trends with trends in poverty and inequality; and considers how various policy options for the future would affect the distributions of income and work incentives.
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