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 (chaired by Professor Russell Mathews)[3] 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[4] and Tax credits and reform of the tax and social security systems.[5]
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.[6][7]
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.[8]
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.[9]
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".[10] (A play on words from Lord Palmerston who is reported to have said: “Only three people have ever really understood the Schleswig-Holstein business—the Prince Consort, who is dead, a German professor, who has gone mad, and I, who have forgotten all about it.")
In 2012, The Strategic Super Investor magazine made Daryl the subject of their annual in Focus profile.[11]
Daryl Dixon continues to write for the Australian press on economic, superannuation and investment issues.
Dixon Advisory collapsed in 2022 after multiple compensation claims and three legal actions were launched against it in the year prior.[12]
Dixon, Daryl (5 June 2012), Securing your superannuation future : how to start and run a self-managed super fund, John Wiley & Sons (published 2012), ISBN978-0-7303-7778-8
Dixon, Daryl (2000), Super strategies for the 21st century : post GST, Information Australia, ISBN978-1-86350-316-7
Dixon, Daryl; Flack, George (1994), How to retire – & live well : increasing income and protecting assets, Business Library, ISBN978-1-86350-167-5
Dixon, Daryl; Brotherhood of St. Laurence; Monash University. Public Sector Management Institute (1993), Superannuation : the costs and benefits, Brotherhood of St Laurence and Public Sector Management Institute, Monash University, ISBN978-0-947081-61-4
Dixon, Daryl; Brotherhood of St. Laurence (1992), Unemployment : the economic and social costs (2nd ed.), Brotherhood of St Laurence, ISBN978-0-947081-57-7
Dixon, Daryl; Brotherhood of St. Laurence; Monash University. Public Sector Management Institute (1991), The way ahead in fiscal policy : discussion paper, Brotherhood of St. Laurence & Public Sector Management Institute, Monash University, ISBN978-0-947081-47-8
Dixon, Daryl; Flack, George (1990), The Australian pensions guide : how to get the age or service pension and maximise your benefits, Investment Library, ISBN978-1-86350-046-3
Dixon, Daryl; Martyn, Barry (1989), The new super made easy : your guide to superannuation as investment ([New ed.] ed.), Australian Investment Library, ISBN978-1-86337-003-5
Journal and magazine articles include:
Dixon, Daryl; Walsh, Max (2010–2012), "Purchasing Residential Property in Your SMSF", Equity, 24 (12): 17, ISSN1323-5303
Dixon, Daryl (29 October 2002), "Win and bear it: the bear market offers big tax advanteages for DIY super funds, explains Daryl Dixon", The Bulletin with Newsweek, 120 (6348), A C P Computer Publications: 79(1), ISSN1440-7485
Dixon, Daryl (11 June 2002), "Credits squeeze: a campaign by the Australian Bankers Association for a cut in upfront superannuation taxes threatens the imputation credit system, of which the banks are a big beneficiary, writes Daryl Dixon", The Bulletin with Newsweek, 120 (6328), A C P Computer Publications: 49(1), ISSN1440-7485
Dixon, Daryl (20 November 2001), "Battler boost: the re-election of the Coalition government may be bad news for the superannuation industry but, as Daryl Dixon reports, it's the bee's knees for low income earners.(Illustration)(Statistical Data Included)", The Bulletin with Newsweek, 119 (6302), A C P Computer Publications: 76(1), ISSN1440-7485
^Dixon, D. A. (September 1968). "A Comment on Professor Kaldor's Comparison of an Expenditure and an Income Tax". The Journal of Political Economy. 5. 76 (September/October): 1085–1087. doi:10.1086/259471. JSTOR1830040. S2CID153777081.
^for example, Report on Taxation in Swaziland (with Dr Harold C. Wilkenfeld; submitted to the Government of the Kingdom of Swaziland, 8 March 1973)
^Report: Inflation and Taxation Committee of Inquiry into Inflation and Taxation, Australian Government Publishing Service, 1975. (The Matthews Report)
^Daryl Dixon, Chris Foster and Phil Gallagher, (1982), Alternative strategies to meet the income needs of the aged, Social Welfare Policy Secretariat, AGPS
^Daryl Dixon, (1985), Tax credits and reform of the tax and social security systems Australian Tax Research Foundation
^The report highlights the successful scheme which allows Singaporeans to borrow funds from their Central Provident Fund (superannuation) account for use as a deposit in Public Housing projects resulting in an increase in the home ownership rate.
^Saving for the future: a comparative study of "savings policies" in Singapore and Australia (with Georgina Carnegie), Australian Commission for the Future Ltd, 1991.
^Unemployment: the economic and social costs1988 & 1992 and with the Brotherhood of St Laurence and the Public Sector Management Institute, Mondash University, The way ahead in fiscal policy, 1991 and Superannuation: the costs and benefits, 1993.
^Articles published in The National Times, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian, Canberra Times, The Age and many others
^Stewart, Dr Jenny (26 March 2007). "Demystifying Superannuation". The Canberra Times.
^Coye, Jackey (December 2012). "Love your Work". The Strategic Super Investor. 2. 1 (Summer 2012 – 13): 34–37. Archived from the original on 20 October 2012.