Jinqiao Long received her MS in Regional Economics from the Nankai University in Tianjin, China and completed a Ph.D. in Urban Studies at the University of Glasgow. Her research, using modern applied economics approaches, explored the relationship between housing market outcomes, housing wealth and wider wealth accumulation patterns in China. She has also, working with Duncan Maclennan and Chris Leishman, contributed to published studies of productivity and housing outcomes in the UK, Canada, and
Policy Scotland, University of Glasgow
Jinqiao Long
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Xiaoyang Long
Xiaoyang Long is an associate professor in the Department of Operations and Information Management at the Wisconsin School of Business. She received her Ph.D. in Operations Management from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, and also holds a B.A. in Physics from Princeton University. Xiaoyang’s research focuses on sustainable supply chains and the role of human behavior in firm operations. Her recent projects investigate how customer behaviour interacts with new business models
University of Warwick
Graham Loomes
Graham has degrees in Economics from the universities of Essex and Birkbeck College London. He previously held posts at the universities of Newcastle, York and East Anglia and has been at Warwick since 2009. He has undertaken research for a number of government bodies in the UK and elsewhere, and has received funding from the Economic and Social Research Council and the Leverhulme Trust. Currently, he is a co-investigator in the ESRC’s Network for Integrated Behavioural Science and the
University of Oxford
Hamish Low
Hamish is the James Meade Professor of Economics at the University of Oxford and a Professorial Fellow at Nuffield College. He is also a Research Fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Prior to joining Oxford in 2018, Hamish was a Professor of Economics and Fellow of Trinity College at the University of Cambridge. Hamish holds a PhD in Economics from University College London. His research agenda is focused on three connected sets of issues: first, what sort of uncertainty do individuals face
Bennett Institution for Public Policy, University of Cambridge
Saite Lu
Dr Saite Lu is a senior teaching associate in development economics at the Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge and a research associate for the Wealth Economy project at the Bennett Institute for Public Policy. The project explores the conceptualisation and measurement of ‘missing capitals’. His work mainly considers the role of human capital and its interactions with social and natural capital. His secondary research field is on national accounting and empirical macroeconomic
University of Bristol
Kate Lucas
Kate Lucas is an Editorial Assistant at ECO’s Bristol hub. She graduated from the University of Bristol in 2021 with a degree in Economics, and is shortlisted for the Playfair Prize. She will be working at L.E.K. Consulting as an Associate Consultant from September.