Hamish is the James Meade Professor of Economics at the University of Oxford and a Professorial Fellow at Nuffield College. He is also a Research Fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Prior to joining Oxford in 2018, Hamish was a Professor of Economics and Fellow of Trinity College at the University of Cambridge. Hamish holds a PhD in Economics from University College London. His research agenda is focused on three connected sets of issues: first, what sort of uncertainty do individuals
University of Oxford
Hamish Low
Bennett Institution for Public Policy, University of Cambridge
Saite Lu
Dr Saite Lu is a senior teaching associate in development economics at the Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge and a research associate for the Wealth Economy project at the Bennett Institute for Public Policy. The project explores the conceptualisation and measurement of ‘missing capitals’. His work mainly considers the role of human capital and its interactions with social and natural capital. His secondary research field is on national accounting and empirical
University of Bristol
Kate Lucas
Kate Lucas is an Editorial Assistant at ECO’s Bristol hub. She graduated from the University of Bristol in 2021 with a degree in Economics, and is shortlisted for the Playfair Prize. She will be working at L.E.K. Consulting as an Associate Consultant from September.
University of Nottingham
Benjamin Lucas
Benjamin Lucas (PhD, FHEA) is an academic data scientist and marketing researcher with an interest in novel commercial and policy problems. Benjamin is also Managing Director at 3di.ac.uk (the University of Nottingham’s Data-Driven Discovery Initiative).
Royal Holloway, University of London and IFS
Melanie Luhrmann
Melanie Luhrmann is Professor of Economics at Royal Holloway, University of London and research associate at the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Melanie’s research focuses on public policy and health economics. In particular, she studies long run trends in nutrition and health. Currently, she evaluates a set of early life nutrition and health interventions introduced in the UK in the 1940s to explore their life cycle impacts on mortality and health outcomes in a project funded by the British
Queen’s Management School, Queen’s University Belfast and UK Enterprise Research Centre
Hoang Luong
Hoang M. Luong is currently a research fellow at Queen’s Management School, QUB. His main project is about innovation, entrepreneurship and productivity. The project is funded by the Department for the Economy Northern Ireland and Invest NI. Hoang’s research interests include innovation and entrepreneurship, corporate governance, and productivity and growth. He also has experience working and publishing meta-analysis in economics.