Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research


The Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research is a research centre located in Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg.
LISER is a Luxembourgish public research institute under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Higher Education and Research. Its research focus lies in the field of social and economic policy including the spatial dimension. This comprises topics like poverty, inequality, education, social inclusion, employment, unemployment, health, housing, mobility, and regional convergence. The aim is to improve the understanding of causal relationships and to provide sound evidence for the impact of institutional settings and policy options on outcomes. Based on empirical evidence, the Institute wants to provide well-grounded and clear-cut answers to policy relevant questions. The results are published in form of research reports, monographs and scientific articles.
LISER has been integrated into a unified legal framework for the luxembourgish research institutes based on the law of 3 December 2014. It has an annual budget of approximately 18,5 million euro, of which 60% is allocated by the government, and 40% are coming from project related funding resources. Governmental funding is based on a multiannual performance contract.

Research

Luxembourg and the Greater Region provide a unique and excellent laboratory for investigating social policy issues that are of key importance for the process of European integration. Substantial institutional differentials within a relatively small distance and their impact on cross-border activities like firm location, household mobility, monetary flows, and the like are generating an abundance of research topics, which are of relevance for a better understanding of the mechanisms of economic and social convergence or divergence.
LISER contributes to the advancement of scientific knowledge in social and economic matters across the activities of its three research departments "Living Conditions", "Labour Market" and "Urban Development and Mobility". In parallel, the institute aligns itself with national and European priorities and fosters interdisciplinarity by focusing its research work on three priority research programmes: "Crossing Borders", "Health and Health Systems" and "Digital Transformation".
LISER hosts two complementary infrastructures, key drivers of its research development and excellence.
The Data Centre, which consists of two pillars, the data collection capability, and the data archiving and data management capability.
The Behavioural and Experimental Economics dedicated to investigating human decision-making by means of experiments performed in controlled environments. Its experimental approach contributes to improving the understanding of human behaviour in a large variety of socioeconomic contexts.
LISER aims to be an internationally recognised socio-economic research institute specialising in the analysis of societal changes. Through its inter-and-multidisciplinary research, it makes a proactive and targeted contribution to the sustainable and inclusive development of societies at the national and international levels.
The Institute‘s staff consists of about 180 employees, more than 50% of the staff being researchers, mainly from the fields of economics, sociology, and geography.

Labour Market

The main mission of the department is to produce research that is both excellent and impactful, and more specifically, to analyse the effects of public policies and societal changes on employment and on the workplace.
The department's key themes revolve around:
The department's research is multidisciplinary and makes use of various tools. Through the Labour Market Observatory, the department uses its research infrastructure and competences to advise policy makers and inform the public about new findings in these fields.

Living Conditions

The mission of the department is to produce scientifically high-level and socially relevant research on 'Public Policies, Welfare and Socio-economic Inequalities'.
The department's objective is to contribute via analysis of policy-relevant questions to a better understanding of the drivers of inequality, poverty and social cohesion, both in the short and long term, and of the role, efficiency and sustainability of social policies and the welfare state.
The department is inter and multidisciplinary in nature and characterised by recognised international, scientific and academic expertise in measurement issues and ex-ante and ex-post policy evaluation. More specifically, the department studies the multiple dimensions of individuals' and families' lives which are at the heart of both the causes and consequences of inequality, from early childhood to old age, through education, fertility and family formation, from employment to retirement. Qualitative, typically survey-based research, examines household income, wealth, inequality, poverty, and social inclusion from a variety of perspectives. The impact evaluation of socio-fiscal, family, educational, health, pension and wider social policy on living conditions is an integral part of the department research agenda.
The department contributes also to the multi and inter-disciplinary research programmes of the Institute:
The department's objective is to play a prominent role in academic and societal interdisciplinary and intersectoral research, internationally and nationally. The aim is to provide an understanding of urban life and the functioning of urban areas, the implications for the sustainability of cities as well as the quality of life of their inhabitants and visitors, and in identifying effective pathways at the individual and urban level to stimulate urban vitality and liveability.
Major thematic issues on the research agenda are housing, financial centres development, spatial development, cross-border metropolitan integration, local and cross-border mobilities, public health, and smart cities. The two observatories, one on housing and another one on spatial development, including expertise in GIS, form an important basis for research.
The UDM Department contributes also to the three inter-disciplinary research programmes:
With the free movement of individuals within the EU, political instability and global inequality, more and more people have been crossing borders in recent decades, either as refugees, regular migrants or as daily transnational commuters. These cross-border movements generate important challenges for EU countries, and has particularly strong implications for its labour market, public finances, social cohesion and regional governance around border areas. In this context, it is important to have tools to monitor, analyse and improve the understanding of causes and consequences of these flows - a prerequisite for relevant advice to policy-makers.
The cross-departmental Research Programme on 'Crossing Borders' seeks to coordinate, develop and contribute to the Cross-Border work carried out within and across any of the three departments of LISER.
The Research Programme on Crossing Borders has specific objectives:
Assess the size and structure of historical and recent cross-border flows, and understand their root drivers.
Use innovative sources of data to study the interplay between different forms of mobility.
Analyse the economic and societal consequences of these flows for all parties concerned.
Build projection tools to anticipate future movements.
Develop tools to help policy decision-makers to maximise the gains and/or minimise the cost of current and future movements for European countries in general, and for the Luxembourg society in particular.
Provide stakeholders and the civil society with databases and expert analyses that help them understanding the forces at work and the consequences of policy actions.
Contribute to the training of PhD researchers on these topics.

Health & Health Systems

One of the seventeen goals of the Sustainable Development Goals adopted by the UN in 2015 is "to enable everyone to live in good health and promote the wellbeing of all people at all ages".
The environmental, social and economic conditions in which individuals live, work and develop their daily activities influence a majority of the population's risk factors and health conditions - often representing "the causes of the causes" of disease. Thus, a situation of poverty tends to limit the opportunities to adopt behaviours favouring good health, to live in healthy environments, to access the means of self-realization, and to access quality health and long-term care services.
The cross-departmental Research Programme on 'Health and Health Systems' seeks to coordinate, develop and contribute to the health-related work carried out within and across any of the three departments of LISER. The work focuses on primarily quantitative, social, economic & environmental aspects of health, by harnessing the expertise and infrastructure throughout LISER.
LISER will contribute to this objective by developing high quality, multidisciplinary research on a broad range of topics, including:
Socio-economic and spatial inequalities in the health of individuals and populations.
Socio-economic and environmental determinants of health.
The socio-economic consequences of health.
The economics of health behaviours.
The rigorous evaluation - in terms of effectiveness as well as 'value for money' - of policies that may directly or indirectly influence these determinants, and;
The assessment of health system performance.

Digital Transformation

Like the industrial revolution shook the past two centuries, the digital revolution is transforming our daily life as well as the functioning of our social and economic systems. Individuals increasingly use information and communications technology in their daily life; new goods and services are developed at an increasingly fast pace and our ways of communicating, learning, moving, buying, selling and even consuming goods and services are dramatically impacted by the digital transformation of our societies. The implications of the digital transformation will inevitably go beyond labour markets and will have direct and indirect impact for our social welfare systems as well as our ways of conceiving the next generations' education and training.
Digital Transformations is a transversal cross-departmental research program that seeks to extend the use of mathematical modelling and optimisation to complex socio-economic systems so as to obtain descriptive and prescriptive models able to define/assess socio-economic policies as well as to predict their impact. Its main goal is to connect data to decisions in such a way to solve these problems effectively, achieve better / smarter decisions, and ultimately impact positively society.
The programme heavily exploits analytics, quantitative modeling and computer science to tackle practical problems arising from different domains ranging from finance to education, passing through health care, transportation, telecommunications, and personalised medicine.
Digital Transformations covers the following broad research areas:
LISER has traditionally had a predominant position in Luxembourg with respect to the face-to face survey component. Its portfolio includes both administrative surveys for Luxembourgish and EU institutions as well as surveys used for research by internal researchers and external research collaborators.
Today, the Data Centre aims to collect data for scientific studies in order to make them available to researchers, political actors and other partners in society. Thanks to its expertise in survey methodologies and statistics, the Data Centre is a unique actor in Luxembourg for researchers and decision-makers in the development of research projects and actions on the field.
As a research infrastructure for data collection and archiving of social science data, the objectives of the centre are to:
Ongoing surveys include the Household, Finance and Consumption Survey, The Household Finance and Consumption Survey - Cross-Border Workers and the European Union Statistics on Income, SHARE Wave 8 and Living Conditions.

Behavioural and experimental economics

LISER started investing in behavioural and experimental economics in 2015, with the creation of 'LISER-LAB' which consists of a state-of-the-art laboratory facility with 32 networked computers and a subject pool of about 1000 university students, to run economics experiments.
LISER's Centre for behavioural and experimental economics was established in 2019 with the objective is to:
Researchers' interests span from the study of morality and social norms, and their interaction with the intuitional and cultural environment in which they operate, to the behavioural biases that affect labour market participation and outcomes. The group has a history of publications in several top-class academic journals, including American Journal of Political Science, Econometrica, Economic Journal, European Economic Review, Experimental Economics, Games and Economic Behavior, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, Journal of the European Economic Association, Journal of Public Economics, Management Science and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

History

As of December 3, 2014 the former CEPS/INSTEAD has turned into LISER.
Previously as CEPS, the Centre was composed of five research units: The Department of Population and Employment, the Department of Economics, the Department of Geography and the Department of International Development.
International Master in Social Policy Analysis. With the political and financial support of the Luxembourg Prime Minister and the Minister of Culture, Higher Education and Research a CEPS/INSTEAD related University Consortium was formed in order to create a Graduate School for Comparative Public Policy Analysis and Data. The University Consortium and to guarantee the academic standards of the programme, CEPS/INSTEAD had made a joint venture agreement with the Department of Sociology of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven as key partner and offers an International Master in Social Policy Analysis.
Integrated Research Infrastructure in Social Sciences at CEPS/INSTEAD was a visitor's programme at CEPS/INSTEAD. Its mission was to organise short visits of researchers willing to undertake empirical research in economics and other social sciences using the archive of micro-data available at the Centre.
In 1978, Gaston Schaber founded an ASBL to research persistent poverty in industrialized countries within the framework of the First European Community Program to Combat Poverty. The Centre was then given by Luxembourg law the status of a public establishment by the Prime Minister in 1989, with scientific, administrative and financial autonomy