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Benefit Incidence Analysis×Microsimulation×
DomainePublic PolicySimulation
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine20001957
Auteur d'originePublic-finance and World Bank tradition; codified by Lionel DemeryGuy Orcutt (concept, 1957); modern tax-transfer frameworks developed through EUROMOD and related projects
TypeDistributional analysis of public expenditurePolicy simulation / computational social science
Source fondatriceDemery, L. (2000). Benefit Incidence: A Practitioner's Guide. Washington, DC: World Bank, Poverty and Social Development Group, Africa Region. link ↗O'Donoghue, C. (Ed.) (2014). Handbook of Microsimulation Modelling. Emerald. DOI ↗
AliasBIA, Benefit Incidence, Expenditure Incidence AnalysisMikrosimülasyon, micro-simulation, policy microsimulation
Apparentées45
RésuméBenefit incidence analysis (BIA) assesses how the benefits of public spending on services such as education, health and subsidies are distributed across population groups, typically ranked by income or consumption. It combines data on who uses publicly provided services, drawn from household surveys, with the unit cost or subsidy the government provides per user, to estimate how much of total public spending each group captures. The result reveals whether public expenditure is progressive — favouring the poor — or regressive, and is a standard tool for analysing the distributional fairness of fiscal policy.Microsimulation is a computational method that simulates policy effects by operating directly on a population of individual micro-units — households, firms, patients — and applying rules to each unit according to its own demographic, economic, and behavioural characteristics. Developed conceptually by Guy Orcutt in 1957, it has become the standard tool for evaluating tax reform, pension systems, and health policy before implementation.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Benefit Incidence Analysis · Microsimulation. Consulté le 2026-06-24 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare