Project: The Economy, L’Économie
Yann Algan's research focuses on digital economy, political economy, social capital and wellbeing, and incorporates methods from psychology, sociology, and economics, including randomized evaluations of public policies. He is a member of the OECD High Level Expert Group on Wellbeing. He was awarded Best French Young Economist (2009), and his books on trust and French society have been awarded Best French Economics Book and French Essay (2009) and Best French Economics Book, Prix Lycéen (2013). He is a senior editor of Economic Policy and a member of the French Economic Advisory Board.
Project: The Economy, L’Économie
Yann Algan's research focuses on digital economy, political economy, social capital and wellbeing, and incorporates methods from psychology, sociology, and economics, including randomized evaluations of public policies. He is a member of the OECD High Level Expert Group on Wellbeing. He was awarded Best French Young Economist (2009), and his books on trust and French society have been awarded Best French Economics Book and French Essay (2009) and Best French Economics Book, Prix Lycéen (2013). He is a senior editor of Economic Policy and a member of the French Economic Advisory Board.
Project: The Economy, L’Économie
Yann Algan's research focuses on digital economy, political economy, social capital and wellbeing, and incorporates methods from psychology, sociology, and economics, including randomized evaluations of public policies. He is a member of the OECD High Level Expert Group on Wellbeing. He was awarded Best French Young Economist (2009), and his books on trust and French society have been awarded Best French Economics Book and French Essay (2009) and Best French Economics Book, Prix Lycéen (2013). He is a senior editor of Economic Policy and a member of the French Economic Advisory Board.
Project: Doing Economics
Ralf received his undergraduate degree in Economics from the Johannis Gutenberg University (Mainz, Germany) and his PhD degree from Queensland University of Technology (Brisbane, Australia). He now works at The University of Manchester. He is a time-series econometrician with interest in volatility modelling and forecasting as well as electricity price modelling. He is passionate about teaching with a particular interest in encouraging students to get their hands dirty and apply the statistical methods they use to real-life problems.
You can see many of his teaching videos here: http://www.youtube.com/c/RalfBecker
Support materials for statistical computing in R and MATLAB: http://eclr.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/Main_Page
Project: Doing Economics
Ralf received his undergraduate degree in Economics from the Johannis Gutenberg University (Mainz, Germany) and his PhD degree from Queensland University of Technology (Brisbane, Australia). He now works at The University of Manchester. He is a time-series econometrician with interest in volatility modelling and forecasting as well as electricity price modelling. He is passionate about teaching with a particular interest in encouraging students to get their hands dirty and apply the statistical methods they use to real-life problems.
You can see many of his teaching videos here: http://www.youtube.com/c/RalfBecker
Support materials for statistical computing in R and MATLAB: http://eclr.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/Main_Page
Project: Doing Economics
Ralf received his undergraduate degree in Economics from the Johannis Gutenberg University (Mainz, Germany) and his PhD degree from Queensland University of Technology (Brisbane, Australia). He now works at The University of Manchester. He is a time-series econometrician with interest in volatility modelling and forecasting as well as electricity price modelling. He is passionate about teaching with a particular interest in encouraging students to get their hands dirty and apply the statistical methods they use to real-life problems.
You can see many of his teaching videos here: http://www.youtube.com/c/RalfBecker
Support materials for statistical computing in R and MATLAB: http://eclr.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/index.php/Main_Page
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Sam Bowles has taught economics at Harvard, at the University of Massachusetts and University of Siena. His books include Microeconomics: Behavior, Institutions and Evolution (2005) The New Economics of Inequality and Redistribution (2012). He has also served as an economic advisor to Nelson Mandela and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Sam Bowles has taught economics at Harvard, at the University of Massachusetts and University of Siena. His books include Microeconomics: Behavior, Institutions and Evolution (2005) The New Economics of Inequality and Redistribution (2012). He has also served as an economic advisor to Nelson Mandela and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Sam Bowles has taught economics at Harvard, at the University of Massachusetts and University of Siena. His books include Microeconomics: Behavior, Institutions and Evolution (2005) The New Economics of Inequality and Redistribution (2012). He has also served as an economic advisor to Nelson Mandela and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy.
Project: CORE Insights
Professor Claudia M Buch is the Deputy President of the Deutsche Bundesbank. She is responsible for the Financial Stability Department, the Statistics Department and the Audit Department. Professor Buch is the accompanying person of the President of the Bundesbank on the ECB Governing Council and a she is the Bundesbank 's G20 and G7 Central Bank Deputy. Her fields of specialisation are international finance and macroeconomics, international financial markets, financial integration, business cycles and employment volatility, international banking and foreign direct investment.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Antonio Cabrales the executive vice president of the European Economic Association and associate editor at the Journal of Economic Theory. He has worked in a wide range of topics: the economics of networks, mechanism design, evolutionary games, experimental and behavioral economics. He has published at the American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economic Studies, Physical Review Letters and other journals.
Project: CORE Insights
Professor Claudia M Buch is the Deputy President of the Deutsche Bundesbank. She is responsible for the Financial Stability Department, the Statistics Department and the Audit Department. Professor Buch is the accompanying person of the President of the Bundesbank on the ECB Governing Council and a she is the Bundesbank 's G20 and G7 Central Bank Deputy. Her fields of specialisation are international finance and macroeconomics, international financial markets, financial integration, business cycles and employment volatility, international banking and foreign direct investment.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Antonio Cabrales the executive vice president of the European Economic Association and associate editor at the Journal of Economic Theory. He has worked in a wide range of topics: the economics of networks, mechanism design, evolutionary games, experimental and behavioral economics. He has published at the American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economic Studies, Physical Review Letters and other journals.
Project: The Economy
Juan-Camilo Cardenas gained his Ph.D. Resource Economics from the University of Massachusetts Amherst (1999) and did post-doctoral work with Elinor Ostrom at the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis (Indiana). He has been a visiting professor at the Universities of Massachusetts Amherst, Harvard, UCL, and Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute. He received the Elsevier-Scopus Award Colombia in the humanities for the highest number of citations in the country. His 2009 book Dilemas de lo Colectivo won the Alejandro Angel Escobar prize in his country.
Project: The Economy
Juan-Camilo Cardenas gained his Ph.D. Resource Economics from the University of Massachusetts Amherst (1999) and did post-doctoral work with Elinor Ostrom at the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis (Indiana). He has been a visiting professor at the Universities of Massachusetts Amherst, Harvard, UCL, and Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute. He received the Elsevier-Scopus Award Colombia in the humanities for the highest number of citations in the country. His 2009 book Dilemas de lo Colectivo won the Alejandro Angel Escobar prize in his country.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Wendy Carlin directs CORE Econ. She is a Research Fellow of the CEPR, and is on the Expert Advisory Panel, Office for Budget Responsibility in the UK. With David Soskice she has co-authored three books:
Macroeconomics and the Wage Bargain (1990),
Macroeconomics: Imperfections, Institutions and Policies (2006) and
Macroeconomics: Institutions, Instability and the Financial System (2015).
For more than a decade she was co-managing editor of Economics of Transition. In 2016 Wendy was awarded the CBE for services to economics and public finance.
Project: CORE Insights
Professor Claudia M Buch is the Deputy President of the Deutsche Bundesbank. She is responsible for the Financial Stability Department, the Statistics Department and the Audit Department. Professor Buch is the accompanying person of the President of the Bundesbank on the ECB Governing Council and a she is the Bundesbank 's G20 and G7 Central Bank Deputy. Her fields of specialisation are international finance and macroeconomics, international financial markets, financial integration, business cycles and employment volatility, international banking and foreign direct investment.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Antonio Cabrales the executive vice president of the European Economic Association and associate editor at the Journal of Economic Theory. He has worked in a wide range of topics: the economics of networks, mechanism design, evolutionary games, experimental and behavioral economics. He has published at the American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economic Studies, Physical Review Letters and other journals.
Project: The Economy
Juan-Camilo Cardenas gained his Ph.D. Resource Economics from the University of Massachusetts Amherst (1999) and did post-doctoral work with Elinor Ostrom at the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis (Indiana). He has been a visiting professor at the Universities of Massachusetts Amherst, Harvard, UCL, and Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute. He received the Elsevier-Scopus Award Colombia in the humanities for the highest number of citations in the country. His 2009 book Dilemas de lo Colectivo won the Alejandro Angel Escobar prize in his country.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Wendy Carlin directs CORE Econ. She is a Research Fellow of the CEPR, and is on the Expert Advisory Panel, Office for Budget Responsibility in the UK. With David Soskice she has co-authored three books:
Macroeconomics and the Wage Bargain (1990),
Macroeconomics: Imperfections, Institutions and Policies (2006) and
Macroeconomics: Institutions, Instability and the Financial System (2015).
For more than a decade she was co-managing editor of Economics of Transition. In 2016 Wendy was awarded the CBE for services to economics and public finance.
Dr. Lisa D. Cook is a Professor in the Department of Economics and at James Madison College at Michigan State University. As a Marshall Scholar, she received a second B.A. from Oxford University in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. Dr. Cook earned a Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley. Among her current research interests are economic growth and development, financial institutions and markets, innovation, and economic history. As a Senior Economist at the President’s Council of Economic Advisers during the 2011-2012 academic year, Dr. Cook worked on the euro zone, financial instruments, innovation, and entrepreneurship. She is currently Director of the American Economic Association Summer Training Program.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Wendy Carlin directs CORE Econ. She is a Research Fellow of the CEPR, and is on the Expert Advisory Panel, Office for Budget Responsibility in the UK. With David Soskice she has co-authored three books:
Macroeconomics and the Wage Bargain (1990),
Macroeconomics: Imperfections, Institutions and Policies (2006) and
Macroeconomics: Institutions, Instability and the Financial System (2015).
For more than a decade she was co-managing editor of Economics of Transition. In 2016 Wendy was awarded the CBE for services to economics and public finance.
Dr. Lisa D. Cook is a Professor in the Department of Economics and at James Madison College at Michigan State University. As a Marshall Scholar, she received a second B.A. from Oxford University in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. Dr. Cook earned a Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley. Among her current research interests are economic growth and development, financial institutions and markets, innovation, and economic history. As a Senior Economist at the President’s Council of Economic Advisers during the 2011-2012 academic year, Dr. Cook worked on the euro zone, financial instruments, innovation, and entrepreneurship. She is currently Director of the American Economic Association Summer Training Program.
Project: ESPP, Doing Economics
Carlos is an Associate Professor and the Deputy Head of the Economics Department at the University of Exeter Business School. He has published a number of articles, working papers, a statistics textbook and a book on applied economics. He has also written and co-written two chapters for the Handbook of Economic Lecturers, which is published by the Economics Network. Carlos is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, an Associate of the Economics Network and a member of the Executive Group of the British Council of Undergraduate Research.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Dr. Lisa D. Cook is a Professor in the Department of Economics and at James Madison College at Michigan State University. As a Marshall Scholar, she received a second B.A. from Oxford University in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. Dr. Cook earned a Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley. Among her current research interests are economic growth and development, financial institutions and markets, innovation, and economic history. As a Senior Economist at the President’s Council of Economic Advisers during the 2011-2012 academic year, Dr. Cook worked on the euro zone, financial instruments, innovation, and entrepreneurship. She is currently Director of the American Economic Association Summer Training Program.
Project: ESPP, Doing Economics
Carlos is an Associate Professor and the Deputy Head of the Economics Department at the University of Exeter Business School. He has published a number of articles, working papers, a statistics textbook and a book on applied economics. He has also written and co-written two chapters for the Handbook of Economic Lecturers, which is published by the Economics Network. Carlos is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, an Associate of the Economics Network and a member of the Executive Group of the British Council of Undergraduate Research.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Project: ESPP, Doing Economics
Carlos is an Associate Professor and the Deputy Head of the Economics Department at the University of Exeter Business School. He has published a number of articles, working papers, a statistics textbook and a book on applied economics. He has also written and co-written two chapters for the Handbook of Economic Lecturers, which is published by the Economics Network. Carlos is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, an Associate of the Economics Network and a member of the Executive Group of the British Council of Undergraduate Research.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Project: The Economy
Diane Coyle is founder of Enlightenment Economics, Co-Director of Policy@Manchester, a member of the Natural Capital Committee and also a Fellow of the Office for National Statistics and researcher at the Economic Statistics Centre of Excellence. She specializes in the economics of new technologies, markets and competition. Diane was a BBC Trustee for more than eight years, was formerly a member of the Migration Advisory Committee and the Competition Commission. Until 2001 she was Economics Editor of The Independent. Diane was awarded the OBE in January 2009.
Project: The Economy
Diane Coyle is founder of Enlightenment Economics, Co-Director of Policy@Manchester, a member of the Natural Capital Committee and also a Fellow of the Office for National Statistics and researcher at the Economic Statistics Centre of Excellence. She specializes in the economics of new technologies, markets and competition. Diane was a BBC Trustee for more than eight years, was formerly a member of the Migration Advisory Committee and the Competition Commission. Until 2001 she was Economics Editor of The Independent. Diane was awarded the OBE in January 2009.
Project: The Economy
Diane Coyle is founder of Enlightenment Economics, Co-Director of Policy@Manchester, a member of the Natural Capital Committee and also a Fellow of the Office for National Statistics and researcher at the Economic Statistics Centre of Excellence. She specializes in the economics of new technologies, markets and competition. Diane was a BBC Trustee for more than eight years, was formerly a member of the Migration Advisory Committee and the Competition Commission. Until 2001 she was Economics Editor of The Independent. Diane was awarded the OBE in January 2009.
Project: Experiencing Economics
Marcus Giamattei is a professor of economics at Bard College Berlin. He holds a Habilitation (2020) and a PhD in Economics (2015), both from the University of Passau. Before coming to Berlin, he was an assistant professor at the University of Passau, where he is still an external fellow. His research interests are Macroeconomics and Experimental and Behavioral Economics. He also developed classEx, a tool for interactive classroom and lab-in-the-field experiments with mobile devices. This tool enables instructors and researchers to use experiments outside of the lab and for teaching economics. classEx is used in over 50 countries around the world. For more information on classEx, see classEx.de
Project: Experiencing Economics
Marcus Giamattei is a professor of economics at Bard College Berlin. He holds a Habilitation (2020) and a PhD in Economics (2015), both from the University of Passau. Before coming to Berlin, he was an assistant professor at the University of Passau, where he is still an external fellow. His research interests are Macroeconomics and Experimental and Behavioral Economics. He also developed classEx, a tool for interactive classroom and lab-in-the-field experiments with mobile devices. This tool enables instructors and researchers to use experiments outside of the lab and for teaching economics. classEx is used in over 50 countries around the world. For more information on classEx, see classEx.de
Project: Experiencing Economics
Marcus Giamattei is a professor of economics at Bard College Berlin. He holds a Habilitation (2020) and a PhD in Economics (2015), both from the University of Passau. Before coming to Berlin, he was an assistant professor at the University of Passau, where he is still an external fellow. His research interests are Macroeconomics and Experimental and Behavioral Economics. He also developed classEx, a tool for interactive classroom and lab-in-the-field experiments with mobile devices. This tool enables instructors and researchers to use experiments outside of the lab and for teaching economics. classEx is used in over 50 countries around the world. For more information on classEx, see classEx.de
Ian Goldin is the founding Director of the Oxford Martin School. Ian previously was World Bank Vice President and the Group’s Director of Policy, after serving as Chief Executive of the Development Bank of Southern Africa and Economic Advisor to President Nelson Mandela. Ian has served as Principal Economist at the EBRD and Director of Programmes at the OECD Development Centre. Ian has been knighted by the French Government and has published 20 books.
Ian Goldin is the founding Director of the Oxford Martin School. Ian previously was World Bank Vice President and the Group’s Director of Policy, after serving as Chief Executive of the Development Bank of Southern Africa and Economic Advisor to President Nelson Mandela. Ian has served as Principal Economist at the EBRD and Director of Programmes at the OECD Development Centre. Ian has been knighted by the French Government and has published 20 books.
Simon Halliday is an Associate Professor in the School of Economics at the University of Bristol, UK and a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study (CASBS) at Stanford University (2022-23).
He has co-authored (with Samuel Bowles) an intermediate-level microeconomics textbook: Microeconomics: Competition, Conflict, and Coordination (OUP, 2022) and works in economics education, behavioral and experimental economics, and economic development. Simon is also the co-leader of the enCOREage Project.
In a new textbook, Understanding the Economy, the enCOREage team will introduce content that draws students in because it addresses societal problems students care about while building employability skills, belonging, and inclusion into the curriculum.
Visit core-econ.org/project/encoreage to find out more about the enCOREage Project.
Simon Halliday is an Associate Professor in the School of Economics at the University of Bristol, UK and a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study (CASBS) at Stanford University (2022-23).
He has co-authored (with Samuel Bowles) an intermediate-level microeconomics textbook: Microeconomics: Competition, Conflict, and Coordination (OUP, 2022) and works in economics education, behavioral and experimental economics, and economic development. Simon is also the co-leader of the enCOREage Project.
In a new textbook, Understanding the Economy, the enCOREage team will introduce content that draws students in because it addresses societal problems students care about while building employability skills, belonging, and inclusion into the curriculum.
Visit core-econ.org/project/encoreage to find out more about the enCOREage Project.
Ian Goldin is the founding Director of the Oxford Martin School. Ian previously was World Bank Vice President and the Group’s Director of Policy, after serving as Chief Executive of the Development Bank of Southern Africa and Economic Advisor to President Nelson Mandela. Ian has served as Principal Economist at the EBRD and Director of Programmes at the OECD Development Centre. Ian has been knighted by the French Government and has published 20 books.
Simon Halliday is an Associate Professor in the School of Economics at the University of Bristol, UK and a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study (CASBS) at Stanford University (2022-23).
He has co-authored (with Samuel Bowles) an intermediate-level microeconomics textbook: Microeconomics: Competition, Conflict, and Coordination (OUP, 2022) and works in economics education, behavioral and experimental economics, and economic development. Simon is also the co-leader of the enCOREage Project.
In a new textbook, Understanding the Economy, the enCOREage team will introduce content that draws students in because it addresses societal problems students care about while building employability skills, belonging, and inclusion into the curriculum.
Visit core-econ.org/project/encoreage to find out more about the enCOREage Project.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Professor Cameron Hepburn is an expert in environmental, resource and energy economics and also a Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford. He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co- founding three successful businesses, including Aurora Energy Research, and investing in several other start-ups.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Professor Cameron Hepburn is an expert in environmental, resource and energy economics and also a Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford. He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co- founding three successful businesses, including Aurora Energy Research, and investing in several other start-ups.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Professor Cameron Hepburn is an expert in environmental, resource and energy economics and also a Professorial Research Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics and a Fellow at New College, Oxford. He has also had an entrepreneurial career, co- founding three successful businesses, including Aurora Energy Research, and investing in several other start-ups.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
David worked as the Economics Editor for CORE Econ between October 2013 and March 2015. He researches at the intersection of macroeconomics and political science and is especially interested in inequality and redistribution, economic growth, macroeconomic imbalances and varieties of capitalism.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
David worked as the Economics Editor for CORE Econ between October 2013 and March 2015. He researches at the intersection of macroeconomics and political science and is especially interested in inequality and redistribution, economic growth, macroeconomic imbalances and varieties of capitalism.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
David worked as the Economics Editor for CORE Econ between October 2013 and March 2015. He researches at the intersection of macroeconomics and political science and is especially interested in inequality and redistribution, economic growth, macroeconomic imbalances and varieties of capitalism.
Prof Jenkins is a Professor (Teaching) in the Economics Department at University College London, Associate Director for the Centre for Teaching and Learning Economics (CTaLE), Executive Group member of the Economics Network and Member of the European Economics Association (EEA) Education Steering Committee. She has worked as a professional regulatory economist since 1997, providing advice and training to European companies and regulators in the energy, post, transport, and water sectors, and was Head of Ofgem’s review of energy network regulation (RPI-X@20) between 2008 and 2010. Her research is focused on incentive regulation and economics education pedagogy.
Roula Khalaf is Editor of the Financial Times. She was previously deputy editor from 2016 to 2020, overseeing a range of newsroom initiatives and award winning editorial projects and leading a global network of over 100 foreign correspondents. Before taking up the deputy editor role, Khalaf was the FT's foreign editor and oversaw the FT's operations in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Before that, as Middle East editor, she launched a Middle East edition and led coverage of the Arab Spring. She joined the FT in 1995 as North Africa correspondent and before that was a staff writer for Forbes magazine in New York.
Prof Jenkins is a Professor (Teaching) in the Economics Department at University College London, Associate Director for the Centre for Teaching and Learning Economics (CTaLE), Executive Group member of the Economics Network and Member of the European Economics Association (EEA) Education Steering Committee. She has worked as a professional regulatory economist since 1997, providing advice and training to European companies and regulators in the energy, post, transport, and water sectors, and was Head of Ofgem’s review of energy network regulation (RPI-X@20) between 2008 and 2010. Her research is focused on incentive regulation and economics education pedagogy.
Roula Khalaf is Editor of the Financial Times. She was previously deputy editor from 2016 to 2020, overseeing a range of newsroom initiatives and award winning editorial projects and leading a global network of over 100 foreign correspondents. Before taking up the deputy editor role, Khalaf was the FT's foreign editor and oversaw the FT's operations in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Before that, as Middle East editor, she launched a Middle East edition and led coverage of the Arab Spring. She joined the FT in 1995 as North Africa correspondent and before that was a staff writer for Forbes magazine in New York.
Prof Jenkins is a Professor (Teaching) in the Economics Department at University College London, Associate Director for the Centre for Teaching and Learning Economics (CTaLE), Executive Group member of the Economics Network and Member of the European Economics Association (EEA) Education Steering Committee. She has worked as a professional regulatory economist since 1997, providing advice and training to European companies and regulators in the energy, post, transport, and water sectors, and was Head of Ofgem’s review of energy network regulation (RPI-X@20) between 2008 and 2010. Her research is focused on incentive regulation and economics education pedagogy.
Roula Khalaf is Editor of the Financial Times. She was previously deputy editor from 2016 to 2020, overseeing a range of newsroom initiatives and award winning editorial projects and leading a global network of over 100 foreign correspondents. Before taking up the deputy editor role, Khalaf was the FT's foreign editor and oversaw the FT's operations in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Before that, as Middle East editor, she launched a Middle East edition and led coverage of the Arab Spring. She joined the FT in 1995 as North Africa correspondent and before that was a staff writer for Forbes magazine in New York.
Project: Doing Economics
James was an econometrician with interests in panel data models and moment based estimation. He received his undergraduate degree in Economics and Mathematics from the Open University and his PhD degree from University of Manchester. He worked at the University of Manchester as a lecturer in econometrics. He was passionate about teaching and was an ardent supporter of using computer software and technology to make econometrics more accessible for his students.
In August 2019 James passed away after an accident.
Project: Doing Economics
James was an econometrician with interests in panel data models and moment based estimation. He received his undergraduate degree in Economics and Mathematics from the Open University and his PhD degree from University of Manchester. He worked at the University of Manchester as a lecturer in econometrics. He was passionate about teaching and was an ardent supporter of using computer software and technology to make econometrics more accessible for his students.
In August 2019 James passed away after an accident.
Humberto Llavador works in the economics of climate change, political economy and welfare economics, with publications in Harvard University Press, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, The Journal of Public Economics, Theoretical Economics, and Climatic Change, among others. He has taught economics at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, the Barcelona GSE, Yale University, the University of California-Davis, Korea University and INSEAD. He has also been a member of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton, and a senior visiting fellow of the Grantham Research Institute at LSE. He has received the Recognition Jaume Vicens-Vives for teaching quality and innovation from the Catalan Government.
Humberto Llavador works in the economics of climate change, political economy and welfare economics, with publications in Harvard University Press, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, The Journal of Public Economics, Theoretical Economics, and Climatic Change, among others. He has taught economics at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, the Barcelona GSE, Yale University, the University of California-Davis, Korea University and INSEAD. He has also been a member of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton, and a senior visiting fellow of the Grantham Research Institute at LSE. He has received the Recognition Jaume Vicens-Vives for teaching quality and innovation from the Catalan Government.
Project: CORE Insights
Project: Doing Economics
James was an econometrician with interests in panel data models and moment based estimation. He received his undergraduate degree in Economics and Mathematics from the Open University and his PhD degree from University of Manchester. He worked at the University of Manchester as a lecturer in econometrics. He was passionate about teaching and was an ardent supporter of using computer software and technology to make econometrics more accessible for his students.
In August 2019 James passed away after an accident.
Humberto Llavador works in the economics of climate change, political economy and welfare economics, with publications in Harvard University Press, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, The Journal of Public Economics, Theoretical Economics, and Climatic Change, among others. He has taught economics at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, the Barcelona GSE, Yale University, the University of California-Davis, Korea University and INSEAD. He has also been a member of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton, and a senior visiting fellow of the Grantham Research Institute at LSE. He has received the Recognition Jaume Vicens-Vives for teaching quality and innovation from the Catalan Government.
Project: CORE Insights
Mary Lopez is a professor of Economics at Occidental College, and a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study (CASBS) at Stanford University (2023-24).
Mary is also the co-leader of the enCOREage Project.
In a new textbook, Understanding the Economy, the enCOREage team will introduce content that draws students in because it addresses societal problems students care about while building employability skills, belonging, and inclusion into the curriculum.
Visit core-econ.org/project/encoreage to find out more about the enCOREage Project.
Nick Macpherson was Permanent Secretary of the Treasury for over ten years, leading the Treasury through the financial and wider economic crisis which began in 2007. Nick joined the Treasury in 1985, after training as an economist at Oxford University and University College, London, and working at the Confederation of British Industry and Peat Marwick consulting. He was Principal Private Secretary to Ken Clarke and Gordon Brown in the mid 1990s, and went on to head the public spending and tax sides of the Treasury. Nick is Chairman of Hoare's Bank, a Director of the Scottish American Investment Trust and a Visiting Professor at King's College, London.
Project: CORE Insights
Mary Lopez is a professor of Economics at Occidental College, and a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study (CASBS) at Stanford University (2023-24).
Mary is also the co-leader of the enCOREage Project.
In a new textbook, Understanding the Economy, the enCOREage team will introduce content that draws students in because it addresses societal problems students care about while building employability skills, belonging, and inclusion into the curriculum.
Visit core-econ.org/project/encoreage to find out more about the enCOREage Project.
Nick Macpherson was Permanent Secretary of the Treasury for over ten years, leading the Treasury through the financial and wider economic crisis which began in 2007. Nick joined the Treasury in 1985, after training as an economist at Oxford University and University College, London, and working at the Confederation of British Industry and Peat Marwick consulting. He was Principal Private Secretary to Ken Clarke and Gordon Brown in the mid 1990s, and went on to head the public spending and tax sides of the Treasury. Nick is Chairman of Hoare's Bank, a Director of the Scottish American Investment Trust and a Visiting Professor at King's College, London.
Mary Lopez is a professor of Economics at Occidental College, and a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study (CASBS) at Stanford University (2023-24).
Mary is also the co-leader of the enCOREage Project.
In a new textbook, Understanding the Economy, the enCOREage team will introduce content that draws students in because it addresses societal problems students care about while building employability skills, belonging, and inclusion into the curriculum.
Visit core-econ.org/project/encoreage to find out more about the enCOREage Project.
Nick Macpherson was Permanent Secretary of the Treasury for over ten years, leading the Treasury through the financial and wider economic crisis which began in 2007. Nick joined the Treasury in 1985, after training as an economist at Oxford University and University College, London, and working at the Confederation of British Industry and Peat Marwick consulting. He was Principal Private Secretary to Ken Clarke and Gordon Brown in the mid 1990s, and went on to head the public spending and tax sides of the Treasury. Nick is Chairman of Hoare's Bank, a Director of the Scottish American Investment Trust and a Visiting Professor at King's College, London.
Project: The Economy
Suresh works in political economy, economic history, and development economics, and is focused on the political organization of labour markets from historical slavery through modern migration. His work has been published in leading economics journals such as the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economics and Statistics, and the Quarterly Journal of Economics. He also writes occasionally for Jacobin magazine.
Project: The Economy
Suresh works in political economy, economic history, and development economics, and is focused on the political organization of labour markets from historical slavery through modern migration. His work has been published in leading economics journals such as the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economics and Statistics, and the Quarterly Journal of Economics. He also writes occasionally for Jacobin magazine.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Project: The Economy
Professor Robin Naylor has taught and researched at the University of Warwick since 1986. His research focuses on the economic analysis of education, labour markets and socio-economic mobility. Robin has acted as a scientific adviser to the European Commission and as an expert adviser on UK Government panels, and is currently the Deputy Secretary General of the Royal Economic Society. His publications include the Economic Journal, the European Economic Review, the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society and the Quarterly Journal of Economics.
Project: The Economy
Kevin Hjortshøj O'Rourke has taught at Columbia, Harvard, University College Dublin, Sciences Po Paris and Trinity College Dublin. He has written extensively on the history of globalization, and his Globalization and History (co-authored with Jeffrey G. Williamson) won the 1999 American Association of Publishers/PSP Award for the best scholarly book in economics. He is the Research Director of CEPR. Kevin is a Fellow of the British Academy, a Member of the Royal Irish Academy, and a Research Associate of the NBER.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Project: The Economy
Professor Robin Naylor has taught and researched at the University of Warwick since 1986. His research focuses on the economic analysis of education, labour markets and socio-economic mobility. Robin has acted as a scientific adviser to the European Commission and as an expert adviser on UK Government panels, and is currently the Deputy Secretary General of the Royal Economic Society. His publications include the Economic Journal, the European Economic Review, the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society and the Quarterly Journal of Economics.
Project: The Economy
Kevin Hjortshøj O'Rourke has taught at Columbia, Harvard, University College Dublin, Sciences Po Paris and Trinity College Dublin. He has written extensively on the history of globalization, and his Globalization and History (co-authored with Jeffrey G. Williamson) won the 1999 American Association of Publishers/PSP Award for the best scholarly book in economics. He is the Research Director of CEPR. Kevin is a Fellow of the British Academy, a Member of the Royal Irish Academy, and a Research Associate of the NBER.
Project: The Economy
Suresh works in political economy, economic history, and development economics, and is focused on the political organization of labour markets from historical slavery through modern migration. His work has been published in leading economics journals such as the American Economic Review, the Journal of Political Economy, the Review of Economics and Statistics, and the Quarterly Journal of Economics. He also writes occasionally for Jacobin magazine.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Project: The Economy
Professor Robin Naylor has taught and researched at the University of Warwick since 1986. His research focuses on the economic analysis of education, labour markets and socio-economic mobility. Robin has acted as a scientific adviser to the European Commission and as an expert adviser on UK Government panels, and is currently the Deputy Secretary General of the Royal Economic Society. His publications include the Economic Journal, the European Economic Review, the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society and the Quarterly Journal of Economics.
Project: The Economy
Kevin Hjortshøj O'Rourke has taught at Columbia, Harvard, University College Dublin, Sciences Po Paris and Trinity College Dublin. He has written extensively on the history of globalization, and his Globalization and History (co-authored with Jeffrey G. Williamson) won the 1999 American Association of Publishers/PSP Award for the best scholarly book in economics. He is the Research Director of CEPR. Kevin is a Fellow of the British Academy, a Member of the Royal Irish Academy, and a Research Associate of the NBER.
Project: The Economy
Malcolm Pemberton is co-author of Mathematics for Economists: An Introductory Textbook (2016), which is the mathematical reference for CORE's Leibniz supplements. His main research interests are centred around mathematical and econometric modelling in economics. Dr Pemberton has acted as a consultant to many firms and international organizations including the World Bank and the Bank of England.
Project: The Economy
Malcolm Pemberton is co-author of Mathematics for Economists: An Introductory Textbook (2016), which is the mathematical reference for CORE's Leibniz supplements. His main research interests are centred around mathematical and econometric modelling in economics. Dr Pemberton has acted as a consultant to many firms and international organizations including the World Bank and the Bank of England.
Project: The Economy
Malcolm Pemberton is co-author of Mathematics for Economists: An Introductory Textbook (2016), which is the mathematical reference for CORE's Leibniz supplements. His main research interests are centred around mathematical and econometric modelling in economics. Dr Pemberton has acted as a consultant to many firms and international organizations including the World Bank and the Bank of England.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Paul Segal studied economics at Nuffield College, Oxford. He has been a Research Fellow at Harvard University and at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, a Lecturer in Economics at the University of Sussex, and a Consultant Economist at the United Nations Development Programme. His current research focuses on inequality. He pioneered the use of the new top incomes data in analysing the global distribution of income, and is currently working on inequality within developing countries, and new interdisciplinary approaches to economic inequality as a Leverhulme Research Fellow.
Project: The Economy, CORE USA
Rajiv Sethi' s research areas include microeconomics and game theory, with applications to inequality, crime, and communication. In recent research, he has examined segregation in neighborhoods and social networks, stereotyping in economic interactions, disparities across groups in crime victimization and incarceration, and the intergenerational transmission of inequality. He is on the editorial boards of the American Economic Review and Economics and Philosophy, and is an External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Paul Segal studied economics at Nuffield College, Oxford. He has been a Research Fellow at Harvard University and at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, a Lecturer in Economics at the University of Sussex, and a Consultant Economist at the United Nations Development Programme. His current research focuses on inequality. He pioneered the use of the new top incomes data in analysing the global distribution of income, and is currently working on inequality within developing countries, and new interdisciplinary approaches to economic inequality as a Leverhulme Research Fellow.
Project: The Economy, CORE USA
Rajiv Sethi' s research areas include microeconomics and game theory, with applications to inequality, crime, and communication. In recent research, he has examined segregation in neighborhoods and social networks, stereotyping in economic interactions, disparities across groups in crime victimization and incarceration, and the intergenerational transmission of inequality. He is on the editorial boards of the American Economic Review and Economics and Philosophy, and is an External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Paul Segal studied economics at Nuffield College, Oxford. He has been a Research Fellow at Harvard University and at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, a Lecturer in Economics at the University of Sussex, and a Consultant Economist at the United Nations Development Programme. His current research focuses on inequality. He pioneered the use of the new top incomes data in analysing the global distribution of income, and is currently working on inequality within developing countries, and new interdisciplinary approaches to economic inequality as a Leverhulme Research Fellow.
Project: The Economy, CORE USA
Rajiv Sethi' s research areas include microeconomics and game theory, with applications to inequality, crime, and communication. In recent research, he has examined segregation in neighborhoods and social networks, stereotyping in economic interactions, disparities across groups in crime victimization and incarceration, and the intergenerational transmission of inequality. He is on the editorial boards of the American Economic Review and Economics and Philosophy, and is an External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Having taught a wide variety of economics courses to undergraduates studying PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics), she is enthusiastic about CORE Econ’s mission to teach economics in a social and political context, and to make economic modelling accessible to students with different interests and backgrounds. Margaret Stevens has taught at the University of Oxford since 1993, having been a schoolteacher earlier in her career. Her research interests are in labour economics and public economics, including theoretical models of labour markets and public policy issues relating to health, education and vocational training.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Having taught a wide variety of economics courses to undergraduates studying PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics), she is enthusiastic about CORE Econ’s mission to teach economics in a social and political context, and to make economic modelling accessible to students with different interests and backgrounds. Margaret Stevens has taught at the University of Oxford since 1993, having been a schoolteacher earlier in her career. Her research interests are in labour economics and public economics, including theoretical models of labour markets and public policy issues relating to health, education and vocational training.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Having taught a wide variety of economics courses to undergraduates studying PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics), she is enthusiastic about CORE Econ’s mission to teach economics in a social and political context, and to make economic modelling accessible to students with different interests and backgrounds. Margaret Stevens has taught at the University of Oxford since 1993, having been a schoolteacher earlier in her career. Her research interests are in labour economics and public economics, including theoretical models of labour markets and public policy issues relating to health, education and vocational training.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Since September 2017, Alex Teytelboym is a Tutorial Fellow at St Catherine's College, Oxford and, since 2014, a Research Fellow at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School. He was a post-doctoral fellow at the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems at MIT in 2013-2014 and a visiting professor at the MIT economics department in 2017. He is interested in market design, the economics of networks, and environmental economics. In 2016, he co-founded Refugees' Say, an organization that develops technology to improve refugees resettlement.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Eileen Tipoe obtained her PhD (DPhil) from the University of Oxford in 2017 and was a Career Development Fellow at Mansfield College before joining Queen Mary University of London in 2021 as a Senior Lecturer and Education Expert. Her research is in applied microeconomics and econometrics, covering a diverse range of topics such as creativity, time use, and subjective wellbeing. She has been a staff economist at CORE Econ since 2017 and has mainly worked on Doing Economics and short online courses on LabXchange. In 2020, she received a Teaching Excellence Award at Oxford for her contributions to teaching and learning.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Since September 2017, Alex Teytelboym is a Tutorial Fellow at St Catherine's College, Oxford and, since 2014, a Research Fellow at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School. He was a post-doctoral fellow at the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems at MIT in 2013-2014 and a visiting professor at the MIT economics department in 2017. He is interested in market design, the economics of networks, and environmental economics. In 2016, he co-founded Refugees' Say, an organization that develops technology to improve refugees resettlement.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Eileen Tipoe obtained her PhD (DPhil) from the University of Oxford in 2017 and was a Career Development Fellow at Mansfield College before joining Queen Mary University of London in 2021 as a Senior Lecturer and Education Expert. Her research is in applied microeconomics and econometrics, covering a diverse range of topics such as creativity, time use, and subjective wellbeing. She has been a staff economist at CORE Econ since 2017 and has mainly worked on Doing Economics and short online courses on LabXchange. In 2020, she received a Teaching Excellence Award at Oxford for her contributions to teaching and learning.
Project: The Economy, ESPP
Since September 2017, Alex Teytelboym is a Tutorial Fellow at St Catherine's College, Oxford and, since 2014, a Research Fellow at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School. He was a post-doctoral fellow at the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems at MIT in 2013-2014 and a visiting professor at the MIT economics department in 2017. He is interested in market design, the economics of networks, and environmental economics. In 2016, he co-founded Refugees' Say, an organization that develops technology to improve refugees resettlement.
Project: The Economy, ESPP, Doing Economics
Eileen Tipoe obtained her PhD (DPhil) from the University of Oxford in 2017 and was a Career Development Fellow at Mansfield College before joining Queen Mary University of London in 2021 as a Senior Lecturer and Education Expert. Her research is in applied microeconomics and econometrics, covering a diverse range of topics such as creativity, time use, and subjective wellbeing. She has been a staff economist at CORE Econ since 2017 and has mainly worked on Doing Economics and short online courses on LabXchange. In 2020, she received a Teaching Excellence Award at Oxford for her contributions to teaching and learning.
Project: Doing Economics
Guglielmo is a Professor of Economics at City, University of London. He received his PhD from Dundee University, his MSc Economics from Glasgow University and his Laurea in Political Economy from the Trento University. His research interests lie in the area of economics education and students achievement. He has recently been involved in a large scale project aimed at investigating the development of ‘sense of belonging’ among first year undergraduate students. An ‘identity economics’ framework is used to investigate the factors affecting a student’s development of belonging to the institution of study and the implications for academic achievement. He is also researching the impact of ‘loss aversion’ in providing incentives to study harder. Guglielmo is also interested in the pedagogical benefits of problem and enquiry based learning. He applies their principles in his teaching and researches its application in economics and is effectiveness in enhancing learning. Guglielmo is a National Teaching Fellow and also an associate of the Economics Network (www.economicsnetwork.ac.uk).
Project: The Economy
Georg's research areas include entrepreneurship, innovation, the economics of intellectual property and of intangible assets. Current research includes analysis of the European patent system, the use of internet search data for the valuation of intangible (knowledge) assets and measuring the returns to R&D and innovation at the firm level. He is Senior Lecturer in Quantitative Methods at Queen Mary University of London, School of Business and Management. He is an Economics Fellow at the Centre for Copyright and New Business Models in the Creative Economy (CREATe) and an associate member of the Center for Competiton Policy at University of East Anglia as well as at the Oxford Intellectual Property Research Centre.
Personal website: http://www.busman.qmul.ac.uk/staff/vongraevenitzg.html
Project: Doing Economics
Guglielmo is a Professor of Economics at City, University of London. He received his PhD from Dundee University, his MSc Economics from Glasgow University and his Laurea in Political Economy from the Trento University. His research interests lie in the area of economics education and students achievement. He has recently been involved in a large scale project aimed at investigating the development of ‘sense of belonging’ among first year undergraduate students. An ‘identity economics’ framework is used to investigate the factors affecting a student’s development of belonging to the institution of study and the implications for academic achievement. He is also researching the impact of ‘loss aversion’ in providing incentives to study harder. Guglielmo is also interested in the pedagogical benefits of problem and enquiry based learning. He applies their principles in his teaching and researches its application in economics and is effectiveness in enhancing learning. Guglielmo is a National Teaching Fellow and also an associate of the Economics Network (www.economicsnetwork.ac.uk).
Project: The Economy
Georg's research areas include entrepreneurship, innovation, the economics of intellectual property and of intangible assets. Current research includes analysis of the European patent system, the use of internet search data for the valuation of intangible (knowledge) assets and measuring the returns to R&D and innovation at the firm level. He is Senior Lecturer in Quantitative Methods at Queen Mary University of London, School of Business and Management. He is an Economics Fellow at the Centre for Copyright and New Business Models in the Creative Economy (CREATe) and an associate member of the Center for Competiton Policy at University of East Anglia as well as at the Oxford Intellectual Property Research Centre.
Personal website: http://www.busman.qmul.ac.uk/staff/vongraevenitzg.html
Project: ESPP, Doing Economics
Stephen is a Professor in the Department of Economics, Mathematics and Statistics at Birkbeck, University of London and Director of the Graduate Diploma Programmes in Economics/Quantitative Economics. Before moving to Birkbeck in 2001 he worked in the Faculty of Economics and Politics at the University of Cambridge. He had previously worked as a Staff Economist for the Bank of England from 1986 to 1991. His published research spans the fields of macroeconomics, finance and econometrics.
Project: Doing Economics
Guglielmo is a Professor of Economics at City, University of London. He received his PhD from Dundee University, his MSc Economics from Glasgow University and his Laurea in Political Economy from the Trento University. His research interests lie in the area of economics education and students achievement. He has recently been involved in a large scale project aimed at investigating the development of ‘sense of belonging’ among first year undergraduate students. An ‘identity economics’ framework is used to investigate the factors affecting a student’s development of belonging to the institution of study and the implications for academic achievement. He is also researching the impact of ‘loss aversion’ in providing incentives to study harder. Guglielmo is also interested in the pedagogical benefits of problem and enquiry based learning. He applies their principles in his teaching and researches its application in economics and is effectiveness in enhancing learning. Guglielmo is a National Teaching Fellow and also an associate of the Economics Network (www.economicsnetwork.ac.uk).
Project: The Economy
Georg's research areas include entrepreneurship, innovation, the economics of intellectual property and of intangible assets. Current research includes analysis of the European patent system, the use of internet search data for the valuation of intangible (knowledge) assets and measuring the returns to R&D and innovation at the firm level. He is Senior Lecturer in Quantitative Methods at Queen Mary University of London, School of Business and Management. He is an Economics Fellow at the Centre for Copyright and New Business Models in the Creative Economy (CREATe) and an associate member of the Center for Competiton Policy at University of East Anglia as well as at the Oxford Intellectual Property Research Centre.
Personal website: http://www.busman.qmul.ac.uk/staff/vongraevenitzg.html
Project: ESPP, Doing Economics
Stephen is a Professor in the Department of Economics, Mathematics and Statistics at Birkbeck, University of London and Director of the Graduate Diploma Programmes in Economics/Quantitative Economics. Before moving to Birkbeck in 2001 he worked in the Faculty of Economics and Politics at the University of Cambridge. He had previously worked as a Staff Economist for the Bank of England from 1986 to 1991. His published research spans the fields of macroeconomics, finance and econometrics.
Project: ESPP, Doing Economics
Stephen is a Professor in the Department of Economics, Mathematics and Statistics at Birkbeck, University of London and Director of the Graduate Diploma Programmes in Economics/Quantitative Economics. Before moving to Birkbeck in 2001 he worked in the Faculty of Economics and Politics at the University of Cambridge. He had previously worked as a Staff Economist for the Bank of England from 1986 to 1991. His published research spans the fields of macroeconomics, finance and econometrics.