The Melbourne Institute was formed in 1962 as the "Institute of Applied Economic Research" under the leadership of Professor Ronald Henderson. It was the first economic research institute in an Australian university. Henderson built up an organisation with about 40 staff by the early 1970s. It engaged in a wide range of research areas including
macroeconomic forecasting,
financial economics and social economics, and is best remembered for its work on poverty and the development of the Henderson Poverty Line. The name of the institute was later changed to "Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research" (IAESR) and then to "Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research". After the Henderson era,
Duncan Ironmonger acted as director for five years before Professor
Peter Dixon was appointed director. After some restructuring, the new Melbourne Institute based its operation around Dixon's ORANI
computable general equilibrium model of the Australian economy. In the early 1990s, Peter Dixon and a number of his senior colleagues left the institute to join
Monash University. This necessitated a second period of adjustment and restructuring initiated by Professor Richard Blandy who was director from 1992 to 1994. Professor Peter Dawkins took up his position as director in January 1996. In that year, the director and his senior management team, in association with the staff and the advisory board, developed a strategic plan with the unifying theme being the link between economic performance and social outcomes. The first version of this plan was for the period 1996–2000 and it is updated annually. In that year, the name of the institute was changed to "Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic & Social Research". In 2024, Professor Beth Webster was appointed as director and Ronald Henderson Professor. During her tenure the name of the institute changed back to "Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research" (removing the colon and ampersand symbols). The institute was restructured into six key research areas: Disadvantage and Wellbeing in the Asia-Pacific, Family and Labour Economics, Health Economics, HILDA (Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia), Macroeconomics, and Wellbeing and Economic Empowerment. ==Highlights==