Sarah Hall is Professor of Economic Geography at the University of Nottingham and a Senior Fellow at the UK in a Changing Europe. Her research centres on services trade, particularly financial services, with a focus on the uneven economic geographies of post-Brexit UK. She has provided evidence to a range of trade bodies, policy makers and the media including at Westminster, to the Scottish Parliament, The Financial Times, the BBC, The New York Times and The Daily Telegraph.
University of Nottingham
Sarah Hall
University of Liverpool
Lu Han
Lu Han is a Lecturer at the University of Liverpool Management School and a Research Affiliate at the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). He is a macroeconomist with research interests in International Economics, Open Macroeconomics, Firms and Trade. His recent work includes the impact of Brexit on firms’ export and pricing decisions. He holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Cambridge.
Resolution Foundation
Karl Handscomb
Karl is a Senior Economist at the Resolution Foundation. He specialises on welfare, but also works on broader labour market and economic growth issues. Previously he worked as an economist in the civil service, advising on cross government labour market strategy, economic and fiscal risk management, Universal Credit evaluation and labour market activation policy.
University of Glasgow
Nick Hanley
Nick is Professor of Environmental and One Health Economics at the University Of Glasgow. His main research interests are environmental valuation, ecological-economic modelling, economic history and the economics of sustainable development. He has recently been working on a number of One Health projects. Nick is co-author of three textbooks in environmental economics and cost-benefit analysis.
Northwestern University
W. Walker Hanlon
W. Walker Hanlon is an Associate Professor in the Economics Department at Northwestern University. His research focuses on understanding how economies evolve over the long-run using novel historical data. He is particularly interested in questions related to technological progress, urbanization, demography, international trade, and the environment. Before joining Northwestern, Professor Hanlon spent four years working at NYU’s Stern School of Business, one year as a Kenen Fellow at Princeton
Imperial College Business School
Stephen Hansen
Stephen Hansen is Associate Professor of Economics at Imperial College Business School. He has served as an academic consultant to the Bank of England, and has recently held fellowships at the Hoover Institute and Alan Turing Institute. He is currently a Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research and CESifo, where he also serves on the Scientific Advisory Board. Areas of expertise include financial transaction data, machine learning, natural language processing.