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Dive into the research topics where Peter G. Backus is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter G. Backus.


The Economic Journal | 2017

Charitable Bequests and Wealth at Death

Anthony B. Atkinson; Peter G. Backus; John Micklewright

Charitable bequests are a major source of income for charities but surprisingly little is known about them. The aim of this paper is to propose a multi-stage framework for analysing the bequest decision and to examine the evidence for Great Britain provided by new data on estates. The novelty of the framework is that it distinguishes between the different steps that lead to a charitable bequest. Our new data for Britain have the advantage of covering the whole population, in contrast to much of the US literature based on the small fraction of the population covered by estate tax returns. We focus on the relationship with wealth at death, on the form of the bequest, and on the different causes to which people bequeath.


Archive | 2014

Is Income Redistribution a Form of Insurance, a Public Good or Both?

Peter G. Backus; Alejandro Esteller-Moré

This paper is an empirical study of redistributive preferences. Our interest is what motivates net contributors to support redistributive policies. Using instrumental variable estimation and exploiting a particularity of the Spanish labour market we estimate how workers’ declared preferences for unemployment benefits spending respond to changes in the local unemployment rate. We then decompose this response into the part explained by risk aversion, and thus demand for insurance, and the part explained by the public goods nature of redistribution. Our results suggest that the declared preferences of workers for unemployment benefits spending are driven by demand for insurance rather than any public goods component. We show how these results suggest that preferences for redistribution in the form of unemployment benefits are driven by insurance considerations rather than by any public goods consideration.


Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics | 2015

Unofficial Development Assistance: A Model of Development Charities’ Donation Income

Wiji Arulampalam; Peter G. Backus; John Micklewright

The empirical literature on the determinants of charities’ donation income, distinguishing the charitable cause, is small. We consider the case of development charities specifically. Using a panel covering a quarter of a century, we observe a strong fundraising effect and a unitary household income elasticity. We find evidence that the conventionally identified ‘price’ effect may simply be the product of omitted variable bias. Our results further suggest that public spending on development crowds in private donations for development. We find a positive spillover effect of fundraising, suggesting the efforts of one development charity may increase contributions to other development charities.


Archive | 2016

Gender, competition and performance:Evidence from real tournaments

Peter G. Backus; Maria Cubel; Matej Guid; Santiago Sanchez-Pages; Enrique López Mañas

There is a growing literature looking at how men and women respond differently to competition. We contribute to this literature by studying gender differences in performance in a high-stakes and male dominated competitive environment, expert chess tournaments. Our findings show that women underperform compared to men of the same ability and that the gender composition of games drives this effect. Using within player variation in the conditionally random gender of their opponent, we find that women earn significantly worse outcomes against male opponents. We examine the mechanisms through which this effect operates by using a unique measure of within game quality of play. We find that the gender composition effect is driven by women playing worse against men, rather than by men playing better against women. The gender of the opponent does not affect a male player’s quality of play. We also find that men persist longer against women before resigning. These results suggest that the gender composition of competitions affects the behavior of both men and women in ways that are detrimental to the performance of women. Lastly, we study the effect of competitive pressure and find that players’ quality of play deteriorates when stakes increase, though we find no differential effect over the gender composition of games.


Journal of The Royal Statistical Society Series A-statistics in Society | 2012

Charitable Giving for Overseas Development: UK Trends Over a Quarter Century

Anthony B. Atkinson; Peter G. Backus; John Micklewright; Cathy Pharoah; Sylke V. Schnepf


Documents de treball IEB | 2012

Gibrat’s law and legacy for non-profit organisations: a non-parametric analysis

Peter G. Backus


Journal of The Royal Statistical Society Series A-statistics in Society | 2013

Are big charities becoming more dominant?: cross-sectional and longitudinal perspectives

Peter G. Backus; David Clifford


Archive | 2012

Charitable bequests and wealth at death in Great Britain

Anthony B. Atkinson; Peter G. Backus; John Micklewright


Archive | 2009

Donations for overseas development: evidence from a panel of UK charities

Wiji Arulampalam; Peter G. Backus; John Micklewright


International Tax and Public Finance | 2017

Risk aversion and inequity aversion in demand for unemployment benefits

Peter G. Backus; Alejandro Esteller-Moré

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Anthony B. Atkinson

London School of Economics and Political Science

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David Clifford

University of Southampton

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Nicky L. Grant

University of Manchester

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John Mohan

University of Birmingham

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Maria Cubel

University of Barcelona

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