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George Mason University

Tyler Cowen

Tyler Cowen is a Professor of Economics at George Mason University, and a long-time writer on the economics of the arts. His main book on arts policy is *Good & Plenty: The Creative Successes of American Arts Funding*

University of Cambridge

Diane Coyle

Diane Coyle is Bennett Professor of Public Policy at the University of Cambridge. She specialises in the economics of new technologies, markets and competition, and measurement of the digital economy. As co-director of the Bennett Institute at the University of Cambridge, she leads research programmes on comprehensive wealth and economic well-being. Diane is a Fellow of the Office for National Statistics and has held a number of public service roles. She was awarded the CBE for her contribution

University of Warwick

Nicholas Crafts

Emeritus Professor of Economic History, University of Warwick and Professor of Economic History, University of Sussex. My earlier career included positions at London School of Economics, Oxford University and visiting appointments at UC Berkeley and Stanford University. At various times, consultant for HM Treasury, IMF and World Bank. CBE (2014); Fellow of British Academy (1992). I am a specialist in 20th-century British economic history.

University of Birmingham, IFS

Claire Crawford

Claire is a Reader in Economics at the University of Birmingham and a Research Fellow of the Institute for Fiscal Studies. She is an applied labour economist whose research focuses on the determinants of education and labour market participation and outcomes, with a focus on the early years and higher education. She has published widely on the drivers of gender, socio-economic and ethnic inequalities in these areas, and what can be done to reduce these gaps.

University of Zurich and CEPR Competition Policy RPN

Gregory Crawford

Professor Gregory S. Crawford is a Professor of Economics at the University of Zurich and Director of the CEPR Competition Policy RPN.  He holds a PhD in Economics from Stanford University (1998) and in 2007-2008 was the Chief Economist at the Federal Communication Commission (FCC), the United States media and communications regulator.  Professor Crawford is an empirical economist specializing in the fields of industrial organization, antitrust/competition policy, and media economics.

Toulouse School of Economics

Jacques Crémer

Jacques Crémer is Professor at the Toulouse School of Economics. He is a Fellow of the Econometric Society and of the European Economic Association. He has done fundamental work on planning theory, auctions, incentive theory, organization economics, and the digital economy. In 2018-2019, as a Special Adviser to European Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, he  co-authored the report “Competition Policy for the Digital Era”. He is an active participant in the debates about the regulation of Big