Professional honours •
2017-2018: President,
Canadian Economics Association •
2001:
Doug Purvis Memorial Prize • :“Taxing Canadian Families: What’s Fair, What’s Not”
Choices vol 6(5) July 2000 with Carole Vincen •
1997: John Vanderkamp Prize for best article published in Canadian Public Policy
Highlighted work “A Cournot-Nash Model of Family Decision Making” (with Zhiqi Chen), Economic Journal, Vol. 111, No. 474 (October 2001), pp. 722–748. On Google Scholar, this paper is the most cited (336 times) article by Woolley with Zhiqi Chen. The paper simulates a two-person family in which individuals are utility-maximizing yet interdependent due to social and economic causes. The Cournot-Nash game is used in the paper to first reach the equilibrium as an approach to solve the utility-maximizing problem, and then used as a "threat point in a bargaining game". Overall, the paper examines the issues within the households related to resource allocation, bargaining power, as well as under the influence of public policy.
“Ending Universality: The Case of Child Benefits” Canadian Public Policy, 22(1): 24-39, 1996. (with A. Vermaeten and J. Madill. Principal author, Frances Woolley; secondary author, Judith Madill; research assistance, Arndt Vermaeten.) Woolley won the John Vanderkamp Price for best article published in Canadian Public Policy in 1997 with this article, where she was the principal author with Judith Madill being the secondary author and Arndt Vermaeten being the research assistant.
“Taxing Canadian Families: What’s Fair, What’s Not” Choices vol 6(5) July 2000 with Carole Vincent Woolley won the Outstanding Research Contribution Award, Canadian Policy Research Awards in 2000 as well as the
Doug Purvis Memorial Prize due to her work that she created with Carole Vincent. The book looks at household economics and provides analysis on family taxation issues. In particular, the book explores issues including taxation on families taking into account of child care, lower-income families, as well as family arrangement. The book proposes some policy solutions with the intention to solve the problems around these issues mentioned above in the Canadian system. == References ==