Arlene Wong is an assistant professor of economics at Princeton University and a faculty research fellow of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). Arlene’s research focuses on macroeconomics, monetary economics, and household consumption.
Princeton University
Arlene Wong
University of Bristol
Max Wood
Max Wood is an editorial assistant at the Economics Observatory’s Bristol hub. In 2021 he completed his Economics degree at the University of Bristol. He is also a content creator and rising star on social media app TikTok.
National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER)
Jack Worth
Jack is lead economist and school workforce lead at the National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER). He is an expert on the teacher labour market, specialising in using large administrative and survey datasets to understand the changing teaching profession and identify ways of improving teacher recruitment, development and retention.
UCL, Institute of Education (IOE)
Gill Wyness
I am an applied economist specialising in quantitative methods. My main research area is the economics of higher education, and I am particularly interested in inequalities in university participation and attainment, and the drivers of it – including higher education finance, information advice and guidance, subject choice, drive and ambition, and school factors such as predicted A-level grades.