Income inequality in Ireland: 1987–2019
Barra Roantree and Michelle Barrett, "Income inequality in Ireland: 1987–2019." Fiscal Studies, 45(2), 143-153. 2024.
Barra Roantree and Michelle Barrett, "Income inequality in Ireland: 1987–2019." Fiscal Studies, 45(2), 143-153. 2024.
Barra Roantree, "Sustainable Development: The Role of Taxation." Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland, 2023.
Michelle Barrett, Karina Doorley, Paul Redmond, Barra Roantree, "How Has the Gender Earnings Gap in Ireland Changed in Thirty Years?." Social Sciences, 2022.
Barra Roantree, "Income Inequality and Living Standards." Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland, 2022.
Peter Levell, Barra Roantree, Jonathan Shaw, "Mobility and the lifetime distributional impact of tax and transfer reforms." International Tax and Public Finance, 2020.
Stuart Adam, James Browne, David Phillips, Barra Roantree, "Frictions and taxpayer responses: evidence from bunching at personal tax thresholds." International Tax and Public Finance, 2020.
Barra Roantree, "Income Inequality and Living Standards." Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland, 2020.
S. Adam, D. Phillips, B. Roantree, "35 years of reforms: A panel analysis of the incidence of, and employee and employer responses to, social security contributions in the UK." Journal of Public Economics, 2019.
Barra Roantree, Jonathan Shaw, "What a difference a day makes: inequality and the tax and benefit system from a long-run perspective." The Journal of Economic Inequality, 2017.
Stuart Adam, Barra Roantree, David Phillips, "The Incidence of Social Security Contributions in the United Kingdom: Evidence from Discontinuities at Contribution Ceilings." De Economist, 2017.
Facundo Alvaredo, Thomas Breda, Barra Roantree, Emmanuel Saez, "Contribution Ceilings and the Incidence of Payroll Taxes." De Economist, 2017.
S. Adam, B. Roantree, "UK Tax Policy 2010-15: An Assessment." Fiscal Studies, 2015.
S. Adam, P. Johnson, B. Roantree, "Taxing an independent Scotland." Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 2014.