Questions and answers about
the economy.

Experts

Filter by surname

Toulouse School of Economics

Yassine Lefouili

Yassine Lefouili is an associate professor at the Toulouse School of Economics. His main research fields are industrial organization, competition policy, digital economics, and the law and economics of intellectual property. He is the director of the executive education program and the master’s program in competition law and economics at TSE, and an associate editor at the International Journal of Industrial Organization.

University of Strathclyde

Otto Lenhart

I am a Lecturer in Economics at the University of Strathclyde. My primary fields of interest are health and labour economics. My research focuses on estimating the effects of public policy changes. The overarching theme of my research agenda is studying health and labor market effects of policy changes that alter individuals’ income security, such as changes to income assistance programs, minimum wages, insurance coverage, and maternal benefits.

LSE

Jason Lennard

Jason is a post-doc at the Department of Economic History at LSE. His research focuses on economic policy, financial crises and national accounting in a historical perspective. His work has been published in the Economic History Review, European Review of Economic History, Explorations in Economic History and Journal of Economic Literature. He has a PhD in Economic History from Lund University and has worked as a researcher at ESCoE and a Senior Economist at NIESR.

NIESR

Cyrille Lenoel

Economist with over 10 years’ experience in financial markets and economic research, Cyrille uses quantitative methods to produce and promote innovative analysis at the border between economics and finance.
His research interests include macroeconomics, time series, financial markets, modelling and forecasting. Cyrille forecasts the UK economy for NIESR.

University of Kent and CEPR

Miguel León-Ledesma

Miguel is Professor of Economics at the University of Kent, director of the Macroeconomics, Growth, and History Centre at the University of Kent, CEPR Fellow, and Fellow of the National Institute for Economic and Social Research. His areas of expertise are macroeconomics, productivity and distribution, and economic growth. Some of his key contributions are around the role of capital-labor substitution in macroeconomic performance and the distributional effects of technical progress.

German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA) and Free University of Berlin

Tharcisio Leone

Tharcisio Leone is an economist, research fellow at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA) and PhD candidate at the Free University of Berlin. His research mainly deals with education economics, intergeneration mobility and income inequality in developing countries.