Welcome to the Spring 2026 issue of the International Journal of Microsimulation.The five articles collected here illustrate the breadth that microsimulation has come to occupy: from tax-benefit redistribution in a low-income economy and validation of an open-source tax-benefit model against linked administrative data, to a discrete-event and agent-based simulator for healthcare operations, and two systematic reviews that take stock of how microsimulation is being used (and could be used more) in food security and in pasture-based agriculture.Read together, the issue underlines a recurring concern: as microsimulation extends into new domains and policy questions, the credibility of its outputs depends on transparent validation, careful methodological choice, and dialogue with adjacent traditions of unit-level modelling.The issue opens with Mwale and Robinson, The redistribution effect of taxation in emerging economies: Evidence from a microsimulation exercise in Zambia.Using MicroZAMOD, the Zambian module of the SOUTHMOD/EUROMOD family, the authors decompose the contribution of personal income tax (PIT), value-added tax (VAT), turnover tax (TOT) and excise duties to poverty and inequality between 2010 and 2019, and complement standard incidence analysis with a cost-effectiveness framework that asks how much each instrument contributes per Kwacha raised.The headline result is sobering: VAT, the dominant revenue source in Zambia as in many Sub-Saharan African economies, accounts for some three quarters of the poverty-increasing impact of taxation, while PIT -small in revenue terms -does most of the work in compressing the income distribution.Building on this diagnosis, the authors design and simulate four reform packages, including a revenue-neutral combination that channels savings from a redesigned PAYE schedule and adjusted excise duties towards expanding the Social Cash Transfer programme.The added value is twofold: extending high-quality tax-benefit microsimulation to a low-income context where the working assumption that VAT is a relatively neutral revenue instrument deserves to be tested empirically, and showing that the prevalence of informal and self-employment makes the question of which tax to raise at least as important as how much to raise.Al-Masbhi, O'Donoghue and Sologon (Bridging Affordability, Nutrition, and Sustainability: A Systematic Review of Microsimulation Approaches in Food Security Research) then take a step back and ask what microsimulation has -and has not -contributed to food security research.Combining a qualitative thematic synthesis with a bibliometric analysis, the review covers applications ranging from sugar-sweetened beverage and "sin" taxes to fertiliser subsidies, food assistance programmes and shocks such as COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine.The take-home message is that affordability and nutrition have attracted the bulk of microsimulation attention, while environmental sustainability remains the missing leg of the food-security stool.The authors call for integrated, systemsbased frameworks that link micro-level behavioural responses to broader environmental and equity outcomes -an agenda the journal will follow with interest.The third contribution, Bruckmeier's research note Evaluating the results of a social benefit simulation using individual administrative data on benefit receipt, confronts a problem that lurks behind every applied microsimulation paper: how well do simulated entitlements actually match the benefits that recipients receive?Using two samples of recipients of Germany's Unemployment Benefit II (UBII, since 2023 the Bürgergeld) drawn from the IAB's administrative biographies, the author tests four variants of GETTSIM -the open-source German tax-benefit model -against recorded entitlements at the individual level.The exercise yields very low beta-error rates and a high match between simulated and recorded amounts once the model is adjusted to reflect how local authorities treat housing
Matteo Richiardi (Tue,) studied this question.
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