Rebekah Stroud has been a research economist in the industrial organisation and demand team at the Institute for Fiscal Studies since 2017. Most of her research looks at how policy can be used to discourage socially harmful behaviour, with particular application to food and drink consumption and motoring vehicles. She is also one of the researchers involved in the NIHR obesity policy research which draws together researchers from a number of different disciplines with the aim of informing the
IFS
Rebekah Stroud
University of Innsbruck
Natalie Struwe
Using experimental methods, Natalie studies the behaviour of individuals and groups in social dilemma situations, with a focus on the strategic configuration of many environmental problems. Her research considers the behaviour and motivations of the general population supporting public good provision through voluntary donations, as well as identifying critical design attributes that have the potential to promote sustainable cooperation between public good providers and the broader population.
School of Economics, the University of Nottingham and Ministry of Finance, the Republic of Indonesia
Arif Sulistiono
Arif Prabowo Sulistiono is an employee of the Republic of Indonesia’s Ministry of Finance. Funded by the Indonesia Endowment Fund for Education, he is currently on study leave to join a PhD program at the University of Nottingham School of Economics. His research is primarily focused on Indonesia’s government bond market and the bondholders’ behaviour. He recently started his adventure as a data scientist.
London School of Economics & Political Science
Andy Summers
Andy is an Associate Professor of Law at the London School of Economics and an Associate of the International Inequalities Institute at LSE. His teaching and research focuses on tax law and policy, particularly the taxation of wealth. His work also investigates the measurement of inequality using tax data.
London Business School
Paolo Surico
Paolo’s expertise lays at the intersection of macroeconomics, finance and applied econometrics. His research focuses on the evaluation of macroeconomic policies using micro-data at the household- and firm-level. Paolo’s latest empirical work has looked the distributional effects of monetary policy and fiscal policy on inequality, consumption and investment across British households and firms, with particular emphasis to the role of housing debt in the transmission mechanism.
Aston University
Ed Sweeney
Edward Sweeney is Professor of Logistics and Systems and Head of the Engineering Systems & Supply Chain Management (ESSCM) Department at Aston University in Birmingham, UK. His research has been widely published and he sits on the editorial