Economics & Deregulation

Economics & Deregulation

Economic policy research has been a core area of the Institute of Public Affairs since the IPA was founded in 1943. The IPA examines state and federal tax, spending and regulatory initiatives, looking carefully at the unintended consequences of government intervention in the economy. Of particular interest are tax reform, government spending, industrial relations, trade liberalisation, economic freedom, physical and intellectual property rights and regulation.

Sub-topics of Economics & Deregulation

Publications

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Submission to Senate Economics Committee Inquiry into the exposure drafts of the legislation to implement the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme

SUBMISSION | Alan Moran

A delinked and non-compliant Emissions Trading Scheme

OCCASIONAL PAPER | Tim Wilson

Why Australia's ETS won't be linked to an international ETS and why it will be inconsistent with our WTO and FTA obligations

Editorial, March 2009

IPA REVIEW ARTICLE | Chris Berg

Is this the biggest financial crisis since 1987? Since the 1970s? Since the Second World War? Since the Great Depression? Since the word ‘finance' was coined? Who knows - my economist can beat up your economist. Like those American political...

So where is our GasBuddy? Can't mates be buddies too?

IPA REVIEW ARTICLE | Christian Kerr

There is a ruthless efficiency about Kevin Rudd. The man who bewailed Brutopia's coming is as ruthless as his own caricatured ‘neo-liberals' and market forces. Even more ironically, market metaphors best describe the Prime Minister's...

Bailout Bonanza!

IPA REVIEW ARTICLE | Julie Novak

IPA Review | March 2009 Periods of economic turmoil have a habit of exposing weaknesses in policy, whether it is through inexperience, a lack of understanding, or a combination of these. Only a short twelve months ago, a newly elected Rudd...

Free to gamble: The roles of the gambling industry and policy in a modern Australian society

OCCASIONAL PAPER | Julie Novak and Richard Allsop

Remarks to the Senate Inquiry into the Nation Building and Jobs Plan

SUBMISSION | Sinclair Davidson

The Senate should reject the fiscal stimulus package in its current format. The package contains a lot of spending and little actual stimulus. The proposed spending is poor quality expenditure of Federal funding. Discretionary fiscal policy has a...

The 'mining boom' myth

IPA REVIEW ARTICLE | Sinclair Davidson

Mining isn't the be-all and end-all of the Australian economy. If the ‘mining boom ends', as widely predicted by politicians and other interventionists, life will go on. Apparently, Australia is even luckier than we generally think. We have...

Hitler's grotesque economics

IPA REVIEW ARTICLE | Sinclair Davidson

Sinclair Davidson reviews The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy by Adam Tooze(Allen Lane, 2007, 799 pages). In the acclaimed television series Band of Brothers the Webster character abuses a column of German...

The adverse effects of government actions against cartels

OCCASIONAL PAPER | Julie Novak and Alan Moran

Government intervention against cartels is seldom effective and sometimes counterproductive. Competitive firms may conspire to push up prices and profits, but this is difficult to achieve for a lengthy period of time. Firms have...

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