Questions and answers about
the economy.

Experts

Filter by surname

School of Law, University of Leeds

Graham Farrell

Graham Farrell is professor of crime science at the School of Law, University of Leeds. He previously worked at Oxford University, the United Nations (in Vienna, Austria), at universities in Canada (Simon Fraser) and the US (Rutgers, Cincinnati) and as deputy research director at the Police Foundation in Washington DC. His research has been funded by the ESRC, the EPSRC, the EU, the Canadian Social Science and Humanities Research Council and others. He has worked as a consultant to the United

Queen’s University Belfast

Mark Farrell

Dr Mark Farrell is a UK qualified Actuary (FIA) and Senior Lecturer in Actuarial Science at The Management School, Queen’s University Belfast. Mark’s research interests include Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) and Insurance Technology (Insurtech). Mark is also a Fulbright Scholar and blogs on technologies affecting the actuarial profession at ProActuary.com.

Queen’s University Belfast

Alan Fernihough

Alan Fernihough is an economic historian with research interests in demography, economic growth, and trade.

University of Pittsburgh

Andy Ferrara

Andy Ferrara is an assistant professor of economics at the University of Pittsburgh. His research lies at the intersection of economic history, labour economics, and political economy with a focus on discrimination, internal and forced migration, and the consequences of violent conflicts, using state-of-the-art data science and causal inference methods.

https://www.lse.ac.uk/International-Inequalities/People/Francisco-H.-G.-Ferreira

Francisco Ferreira

Francisco H. G. Ferreira is the Amartya Sen Professor of Inequality Studies and Director of the International Inequalities Institute at the London School of Economics. He is also affiliated with the Department of Social Policy and the Latin America and Caribbean Centre at LSE. Francisco, who is also a Research Fellow at IZA (Bonn), is an economist working on the measurement, causes and consequences of inequality and poverty, with an emphasis on developing countries in general and Latin America in

University of Oxford

Andrea Ferrero

Andrea Ferrero is a CEPR Research Fellow. Before joining Oxford, he was an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He held visiting positions at various central banks, and is currently a consultant for the Bank of England and the Bank of Finland. His research focuses on low real interest rates, on the international transmission of credit shocks, and on the interaction between monetary policy and macro-prudential policy.