Gemma Tetlow is chief economist at the Institute for Government. She works across the Institute’s programme areas. She joined the Institute in April 2018. Between 2016 and 2018, Gemma was economics correspondent at the Financial Times, reporting on and analysing economic developments in the UK and globally. Before that, Gemma spent 11 years at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, leading the organisation’s work on public finances and pensions. Gemma has a PhD in economics from University College
Institute for Government
Gemma Tetlow
University of Oxford
Alex Teytelboym
Alex is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Oxford and a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for New Economic Thinking. Before returning to Oxford, he was a postdoctoral fellow at MIT. His research interests lie in market design and the economics of networks.
NIESR
Craig Thamotheram
Craig is a member of the Macroeconomic Modelling and Forecasting team at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR). He studied Engineering at Imperial and has a PhD in Economics from Warwick. His main areas of research are applied macroeconomics, time series and machine learning with a focus on textual analysis.
King's College London
Pat Thane
PAT THANE, MA ( Oxford), PH.D (London), FBA, Visiting Professor in History, Birkbeck College. Research Professor in Contemporary History, Kings College, London, 2010-1019 Professor of Contemporary History, University of Sussex, 1994-2001, at the Institute of Historical Research, University of London, 2001-2010.
Bank of England
Ryland Thomas
Ryland Thomas is a Senior Technical Advisor at the Bank of England where he has worked for over 25 years. In that time he has worked in a number of roles analysing both monetary and macroeconomic developments in the UK. He also spent six years in the Bank’s forecast and modelling teams. Ryland’s research has mainly focused on the role of money and credit in the economy and has largely involved using empirical time series methods. Ryland has also researched the impact of QE,
University of Glasgow
Dania Thomas
Dania Thomas a Lecturer in Business law at the Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow. Her areas of expertise are sovereign debt crises and litigation, contract law, international finance and institutions. She has worked on the Argentine debt litigation and the Eurozone debt crises and is currently exploring citizen participation in sovereign debt workouts and good faith as a contracting norm in sovereign debt negotiations. She is an associate editor of Feminist Legal Studies.