Post Tagged with: "Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey"

Median income grew

The Wall Street Journal
07 March 2013
Professor Burkhausers research on the economic health of middle-class households is in the WSJ & NY Times.

read more

HILDA survey shows we’re happy

Radio National
12 February 2013
The latest HILDA survey results show most Australians rank their happiness higher than a seven out of ten.

read more

‘Substantial impact’ of Faculty research highlighted

03 December 2012
A review of 162 research case studies from 12 universities has singled out research conducted within this Faculty as having ‘substantial impact on Australian policy development.’

read more

ABC HILDA interview

ABC
10 July 2012
Listen to an interview on ABC this morning about the release of the HILDA report.

read more

HILDA released!

10 July 2012
The Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey, produced by the Melbourne Institute was released today.

read more

HILDA makes headlines

The Australian
30 June 2012
Judith Sloan, contributing economics editor at The Australian, examines how beneficial the HILDA survey has been to Australia in a superb piece.

read more

A new measure of social exclusion in Australia

7 October, 2011
A partnership between the Brotherhood of St Laurence and the Melbourne Institute is utilising a new approach to assessing levels of disadvantage. Rosanna Scutella discusses the Social Exclusion Monitor.

read more

More mums regain benefit of paid jobs

Weekend Australian, p.11
Saturday 23 July 2011

Researcher Diana Warren commented on findings of the sixth HILDA report relating to the number of mothers with partners who returned to work while their child was under two years old.

read more

Parents prefer boys first

Herald Sun, page 7
Monday 4 July 2011

HILDA study shows that both men and women would prefer a boy as their first child.

read more

Numbers add up as mothers return to work sooner

The Age, page 1
Friday 24 June 2011
Diana Warren’s research reveals that more than half of mothers are returning to work before their youngest child turns two.

read more