Two years as Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Calgary, Canada and then lecturing in Economics at the Australian National University. He was seconded from the ANU to the Department of the Treasury, then three years with the International Monetary Fund in Washington DC focusing on taxation issues in Thailand, Kenya, Barbados and Swaziland all resulting in detailed reports. As a consultant to Treasury he worked on a Taxation Review and in various public service positions in taxation and public finance. Key roles included Research Director of the Committee of Inquiry into Inflation and Taxation and assisting Professor Trevor Swan with the Review of the personal income tax system for the 1975–76 Hayden Budget. From 1978 until 1986, he was Policy Co-ordinator for the Social Welfare Policy Secretariat and continued as Head of this Policy Co-ordination Unit. Significant policy papers and reports include Alternative strategies to meet the income needs of the aged and Tax credits and reform of the tax and social security systems. From 1986, he has been an independent writer and consultant. He has worked for the Australian Commission for the Future comparing the savings policies of Australia and Singapore. Daryl also worked as a consultant to the Social Welfare Policy branch of the Brotherhood of St Laurence producing significant published discussion papers including The way ahead in fiscal policy. In 1986 Daryl began writing the many newspaper articles and published books on personal investment, taxation and superannuation for which he became widely known in Australia. In 1986 Daryl started Dixon Advisory, then Daryl Dixon Writer and Consultant. In 2007 there was a playful reference in The Canberra Times newspaper to his understanding of superannuation in Australia which claimed that there were only three people who really understood super in Australia – "one is dead, one went mad and the other is Daryl Dixon". In 2012, The Strategic Super Investor magazine made Daryl the subject of their annual in Focus profile. Daryl Dixon continues to write for the Australian press on economic, superannuation and investment issues.
Publications
Books include: Journal and magazine articles include: Newspaper articles include:
Sydney Morning Herald supplement on the 1998 Mini-Budget,