Ahmed Jamal Pirzada is a Lecturer in Economics at the University of Bristol and a Fellow of Advanced Higher Education (FHEA). He specialises in macroeconomics with particular interest in understanding the role of nominal rigidities and production networks in firms’ pricing decisions and the monetary policy. His interests also include exploring questions relevant to emerging economies
University of Bristol
Ahmed Pirzada
LSE
Lucinda Platt
Lucinda Platt is Professor of Social Policy at the LSE. A quantitative sociologist, her research focuses on inequalities, particularly those relating to ethnicity, migration, gender and disability. She has published widely on these topics. Lucinda is Associate Editor of the European Sociological Review, co-investigator of Understanding Society, the UK Household Longitudinal Study, and a panel member of the IFS Deaton Inequality Review.
Institute for Government
Thomas Pope
Thomas Pope is deputy chief economist at the Institute for Government. He works across the Institute’s programme areas. He was previously an economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, working on tax and the public finances. He has an MSC in economics from UCL and a BA in philosophy, politics and economics from the University of Oxford.
King’s College London and UK in a Changing Europe
Jonathan Portes
Jonathan Portes was Chief Economist at the Cabinet Office from 2008 to 2011, where he led economic analysis during the financial crisis and the G20 London Summit. From 2011 to 2015, he was Director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research. His research concentrates on immigration and labour mobility and the economic implications of Brexit. Other research interests include labour markets, fiscal policy, social security, and the use of evaluation and evidence.
McGill University
Markus Poschke
Markus Poschke is an Associate Professor and William Dawson Scholar in the Department of Economics at McGill University, Montreal, where he has been working since 2007. In 2018, he received the Bank of Canada’s Governor’s Award. His main research interests are in macroeconomics broadly, in particular inequality, taxation, growth theory, firm dynamics, entrepreneurship, structural change, and the macroeconomics of labour markets.
UCL, IFS
Fabien Postel-Vinay
Fabien Postel-Vinay is a professor of economics at University College London and a Research Director at the Institute for Fiscal Studies. He is also an IZA Research Fellow, a member of the Centre for Macroeconomics and a founding member of the European Search and Matching (SaM) network. He received his Ph.D. in economics at Université de Paris I in 1998. His research fields are applied and theoretical labour economics, labour market policy and economic dynamics. The focus of most of his recent