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Dive into the research topics where Tony Beatton is active.

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Featured researches published by Tony Beatton.


Applied Economics | 2018

Volunteering and life or financial shocks: does income and wealth matter?

Tony Beatton; Benno Torgler

ABSTRACT Volunteering is a dominant social force that signals a healthy state. However, although the literature on volunteering is extensive, knowledge on how life’s discontinuities (life and financial shocks) affect volunteering is limited because most studies work with static (cross-sectional) data. To reduce this shortcoming, we use longitudinal data from Australia (HILDA) that track the same individuals over time to assess how individuals from different income and wealth groups respond to life and financial shocks with respect to volunteering. Although both income and wealth can act as buffers against life shocks by providing stability and reducing vulnerability – which decreases the need to actually change behaviour patterns – we observe more heterogeneity than expected and also stickiness at the lowest income levels. Response delays in post-shock volunteering also suggest that volunteering habits may be driven and influenced by strong commitment and motivation that are not shattered by life or financial shocks. In fact, the amount of time spent volunteering tends to increase after negative income shocks and decrease after positive income shocks.


Australian Economic Review | 2017

Wages, Promises and Effort in an Intercultural Labour Market: Experimental Evidence from Australia

Tony Beatton; Uwe Dulleck; Jonas Fooken; Markus Schaffner

In this article, we use economic experiments to explore the role of culture in labour market interactions between Australian employers and either Australian or Asian workers. We use two variants of the gift exchange game. In one, employers make binding, in the other non‐binding, wage offers. Results show that attitudes and behaviour are similar across cultural groups, but intercultural interaction changes between the games. Non‐binding wage offers are completely disregarded in final wage decisions by employers when made to Asians. However, Asians are rewarded more for additional effort.


QUT Business School; School of Economics & Finance | 2014

Volunteering and life or financial shocks: Does income and wealth matter?

Tony Beatton; Benno Torgler

Volunteering is a dominant social force that signals a healthy state. However, although the literature on volunteering is extensive, knowledge on how life’s discontinuities (life and financial shocks) affect volunteering is limited because most studies work with static (cross-sectional) data. To reduce this shortcoming, we use longitudinal data from Australia (HILDA) that track the same individuals over time to assess how individuals from different income and wealth groups respond to life and financial shocks with respect to volunteering. Although both income and wealth can act as buffers against life shocks by providing stability and reducing vulnerability – which decreases the need to actually change behaviour patterns – we observe more heterogeneity than expected and also stickiness at the lowest income levels. Response delays in post-shock volunteering also suggest that volunteering habits may be driven and influenced by strong commitment and motivation that are not shattered by life or financial shocks. In fact, the amount of time spent volunteering tends to increase after negative income shocks and decrease after positive income shocks.


Archive | 2012

Do changes in the lives of our peers make us unhappy

Tony Beatton; Paul Frijters


European Economic Review | 2018

Gender crime convergence over twenty years: Evidence from Australia

Tony Beatton; Michael P. Kidd; Stephen Machin


Labour Economics | 2017

Larrikin youth: crime and Queensland's earning or learning reform

Tony Beatton; Michael P. Kidd; Stephen Machin; Dipanwita Sarkar


LSE Research Online Documents on Economics | 2016

Larrikin youth: new evidence on crime and schooling

Tony Beatton; Michael P. Kidd; Stephen Machin; Dipa Sarkar


Archive | 2012

Unhappy Young Australians: a domain approach to explain life satisfaction change in children

Tony Beatton; Paul Frijters


QUT Business School; School of Economics & Finance | 2017

Larrikin Youth: Crime and Queensland’s earning or learning reform

Tony Beatton; Michael P. Kidd; Stephen Machin; Dipanwita Sarkar


Archive | 2017

Expert panel: People from small, socially cohesive countries are happier

Tony Beatton; Paul Frijters; Nattavudh Powdthavee

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Michael P. Kidd

Queensland University of Technology

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Stephen Machin

Centre for Economic Performance

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Paul Frijters

University of Queensland

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Benno Torgler

Queensland University of Technology

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Dipanwita Sarkar

Queensland University of Technology

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Jonas Fooken

Queensland University of Technology

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Markus Schaffner

Queensland University of Technology

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Uwe Dulleck

Queensland University of Technology

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Nattavudh Powdthavee

London School of Economics and Political Science

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