Marisa is Associate Professor in Health Economics, a fellow of the Data Science Institute, member of the steering committees of the Nutrition and Food Network Strategy Group and the Vaccines strategy at Imperial College. She has expertise in leading multidisciplinary research in health economics on the economics and policy of healthcare innovation; impact of policies on organisational performance; the behavioural determinants of decision making including health risky behaviour.
Imperial
Marisa Miraldo
Fraser of Allander Institute, University of Edinburgh
Mark Mitchell
Mark is PhD candidate in the University of Edinburgh’s School of Economics, where his research is centred on understanding the causes and effects of labour market inequalities. His current research focusses on understanding the origins of inequalities in human capital, and how early circumstances influence social and economic outcomes across life. Mark is also a Research Assistant at the Fraser of Allander Institute, where he works on a range of topics related to economic policy in Scotland,
Center for Global Development
Ian Mitchell
Ian Mitchell is an economist and Senior Policy Fellow at the Center for Global Development where he leads work assessing the effectiveness of major economies’ development and climate finance policies. He is also an associate fellow with Chatham House’s Environment and Society programme. Until 2016 he was a senior civil servant and economist in
IIES, Stockholm University
Kurt Mitman
Dr Mitman is an Associate Professor at the Institute for International Economic Studies at Stockholm University and Managing Editor of the Review of Economic Studies. His research interests are in macroeconomics broadly defined. His areas of expertise include monetary and fiscal policy, with a particular focus on unemployment insurance, consumer credit, labour and housing markets.
Nottingham
Paul Mizen
Paul Mizen has been a member of the faculty in the School of Economics at the University of Nottingham since 1992 and is currently Professor of Monetary Economics and Director of the Centre for Finance, Credit and Macroeconomics. He has previously taught at the European University Institute, Florence; Princeton University; and University of Vienna. He has a wide interest in matters related to monetary policy, central banking, business surveys, corporate investment and productivity.
LSE
Ben Moll
Benjamin Moll is a Professor of Economics at the London School of Economics. He is a macroeconomist interested in understanding how the enormous heterogeneity observed at the micro level, and in particular the large disparities in income and wealth, impact the macro economy and macroeconomic policy. Moll’s work approaches these questions with a mix of theory and empirics. His current work studies the macroeconomic and distributional consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic as well as those of