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London Business School

Andrew J. Scott

Andrew J Scott is Professor of Economics at London Business School, Research Fellow at CEPR and consulting scholar at Stanford University’s Center on Longevity. He previously held positions at Oxford University, London School of Economics and Harvard. His research focuses on longevity/ageing society and fiscal policy/debt management. He was a Non-Executive Director for the Financial Services Authority 2009-2013 and serves on the advisory board of the UK’s Office for Budget Responsibility.

Yale School of Management

Fiona Scott Morton

Fiona M. Scott Morton is the Theodore Nierenberg Professor of Economics at the Yale University School of Management where she has been on the faculty since 1999. Her area of academic research is industrial organization, with a focus on empirical studies of competition. The focus of her current research is competition in healthcare markets and the economics of antitrust. From 2011-12 Professor Scott Morton served as the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Economic Analysis (Chief Economist) at the

University of Bristol

Flyn Scott-Reilly

Flyn is a current undergraduate student studying for a BSc in Economics at the University of Bristol. He is interested in Applied Microeconomics and Economic Policy.

University of Glasgow

Thomas J. Scotto

Thomas J Scotto is a Professor of Politics at the University of Glasgow. His research interests lie in the areas of voting behaviour, measuring and explaining public opinion on foreign policy issues, and latent variable modelling. His recent peer reviewed work appears in outlets such as International Studies Quarterly, Political Behaviour, and the European Journal of Political Research.

University of Oxford

Petr Sedlacek

Petr Sedlá?ek is a CEPR Research Affiliate. His research mainly deals with macroeconomic questions, with a focus on business cycles, firm and worker heterogeneity. He has obtained the Starting Grant of the European Research Council for his project studying how entrepreneurship, startups and young firms impact the aggregate economy.

The Economist

Marie Segger

Marie Segger is a data journalist for The Economist in London. She covers a broad range of subjects from a quantitative perspective. She often reports on inequality, climate change and cultural trends and she is the editor of The Economist’s data newsletter ‘Off the Charts’.