Reports

Melbourne Institute Annual Reports

Families, Incomes and Jobs: A Statistical Report of the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey

The aim of the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey is to provide, on an annual basis, a new type of social statistics for Australialongitudinal panel statistics describing the ways in which people's lives are changing. This annual statistical report of the HILDA Survey contains short reports and statistical tables covering the four main areas of HILDA: households and family life; incomes and economic wellbeing; labour market outcomes; and life satisfaction, health and wellbeing. Particular emphasis is given to the persistence of problems over the years of the HILDA Survey, for example the persistence of poverty.

Copies of the reports are available from www.melbourneinstitute.com/hilda/Reports/statreport.html

Innovation Reports

Social Policy Research Contract Papers

Journeys Home Research Reports

PwC Melbourne Institute Asialink Index

The PwC Melbourne Institute Asialink Index is the first multi-indicator measure the level of engagement between Australia and Asia over the last two decades along seven dimensions: trade, investment, tourism, education, research and business development, humanitarian assistance, and migration and 25 economies.

PricewaterhouseCoopers Melbourne Institute Asialink Index: ANZ Services Report

The ANZ Services Report examines four sectors in Australia's international trade in services: education, transport, finance and business services. It looks at the level and spread of the trade between Australia and 16 countries of Asia over several years. It compares the relative growth of those sectors in the context of both Australia's goods trade and services trade with Asia, and with the rest of the world.

University Rankings

Melbourne Institute Report Series

The Melbourne Institute publishes ad hoc reports on important economic and social topics investigated by Melbourne Institute researchers.

Other Recent Melbourne Institute Reports