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Latest publications

An overview of the most recent reports and policy briefs produced by the IPR.

Council Tax Reduction and Universal Credit: Winners and losers of the postcode lottery

This study explores how Universal Credit claimants access, are financially affected by and are responding to different Council Tax Reduction schemes in England.


Overlapping icons of a house, a calculator and a pile of coins.

Eligibility, entitlement and assessment criteria for Council Tax Reduction (CTR) – a means-tested discount on council tax for low-income, working-age people – have been left to the discretion of local authorities in England since 2013. In 2025-26, there were 313 separate CTR schemes in operation, each with their own eligibility and entitlement rules. Virtually all working-age people who get CTR are now Universal Credit (UC) claimants, but not all UC claimants receive CTR. Claimants who work are much less likely to qualify for help.

Little is known about how low-earning households are experiencing and responding to CTR. To help fill this evidence gap, this study explored how the different elements of scheme design in England are affecting take-up, household finances and work-related decision making among UC claimants who work.

The research comprised: an online survey self-completed by 160 UC claimants in work; telephone interviews with 30 survey respondents currently or recently in receipt of CTR; and video interviews with five key informants, including local authority officers and specialist advice agencies with in-depth knowledge and experience in the design and delivery of CTR schemes.

An accompanying policy brief summarises key findings and recommendations.

Improving access and participation in higher education: A case for enhancing evaluation evidence

This policy brief explores the types of evidence needed to support effective evaluation of activities designed to widen participation.


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This policy brief, written by Dr Joanne Moore and Annette Hayton (Department of Education), examines the types of evidence that are effective in evaluating widening participation initiatives. Working with staff in evaluation and management roles in a cross-section of higher education providers, their research captures current and emerging evaluation practices.

Their findings suggest that the current standards are increasingly unfit for purpose and could hinder rather than support strategies for widening participation. The authors argue that there is an urgent need for the evaluation framework to evolve, and call for a revised set of standards to support providers in collecting and using evidence.

Paternity Allowance: Six weeks for self-employed and worker dads

The researchers recommend the introduction of a new entitlement for self-employed and worker fathers.


Icon of a parent holding a baby with a calendar behind them.

Although designed to promote gender equality, parental leave policies in the UK have yet to close the gap in uptake, with women taking significantly more leave than men.

Authors , and James Bailey recommend reforming the UK’s current parental leave policies to enable better uptake of leave entitlement by fathers, in turn leading to greater sharing of childcare responsibilities between fathers and mothers, and a stronger attachment to the labour market among mothers.

In the report Costs and benefits of improved paternity leave: too good to ignore, they presented a cost-benefit analysis of one specific policy proposal – an expansion of paternity leave for employed fathers from two to six weeks, at a rate of pay close to salary replacement level.

In this companion piece, they take this proposal further by assessing the costs and benefits, and thus the social net benefit, of introducing a new entitlement for self-employed and worker fathers, who are currently ineligible for any support. They propose the introduction of Paternity Allowance – a six-week entitlement paid at the current Statutory Paternity Pay rate and mirroring in spirit the Maternity Allowance already available to mothers in similar position on the labour market.

Making higher education work for Indigenous peoples in Mexico

The researchers provide recommendations that address six recurring challenges for Indigenous students in Mexico.


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A major five-year study – drawing on research with over 300 individuals across six Mexican states – finds that Indigenous students in higher education in Mexico face important institutional barriers to inclusion, as well as discrimination with regard to Indigenous languages and knowledge systems. Indigenous students' increasing access to universities is challenging the colonial and postcolonial legacies of higher education in Latin America. In particular, its monocultural and monolingual nature excludes the linguistic and cultural diversity that Indigenous students can contribute to campus life and academic learning. The findings offer important insights for national policy and highlight crucial changes that higher education institutions in Mexico need to make.

Green shoots of hope? Increased optimism about future study and work in England’s Opportunity Areas

This research examines how the Opportunity Areas programme affected young people’s hopes and confidence for their future lives in terms of education and work.


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Over the last 15 years the UK has seen a downward trend in young people’s optimism about their futures, particularly among those living in England’s regions. The UK is already one of the most spatially imbalanced economies in the developed world, with large disparities in education and labour market outcomes between London and the South East and the rest of the country.

However, this research offers cause for hope. It shows that young people in areas that received support as part of the government’s Opportunity Areas programme – a £108 million intervention that targeted 12 social mobility ‘cold spots’ across England – have bucked the national downward trend and have shown increased optimism for future study and work since the programme’s introduction in 2017.

What price is free?

This report examines changes to nursery prices in England in the wake of 2024 childcare reform.


Icon of a nursery with a price tag attached.

A major expansion of free childcare entitlement in England is currently underway. , Professor Kerry Papps and Sara Linjawi draw on monthly price data from a large nursery chain to show how prices have changed over the first two phases of the reform, which took effect in April 2024 and September 2024. They also compare how these prices measure up against prices reported by the providers in the 2024 Childcare and Early Years Provider Survey, as well as those charged by other providers in the neighbouring areas.

They find that government funding is likely to cover the costs for children under two in most parts of England, but that funding for three- and four-year-olds fails to cover costs in many places. They find that after the second phase of the reforms, the prices charged for unfunded hours rose fastest at nurseries in local authorities with the least generous funding rates.

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