Vasco Carvalho (University of Cambridge)
Professor of Macroeconomics at the Faculty of Economics of the University of Cambridge and the Director of the Janeway Institute
Vasco Carvalho (University of Cambridge)
Professor of Macroeconomics at the Faculty of Economics of the University of Cambridge and the Director of the Janeway Institute
Vasco M. Carvalho is Professor of Macroeconomics at the Faculty of Economics of the University of Cambridge and the Director of the Janeway Institute. He is also a Turing Fellow at the Alan Turing Institute for Data Science and Artificial Intelligence and a Research Fellow at CEPR. Having gained his PhD at the University of Chicago, he was a Junior Researcher at CREI in Barcelona and Affiliated Assistant Professor at University Pompeu Fabra before joining the University of Cambridge in 2013. He was awarded the 2014 Wiley Prize in Economics by the British Academy for “achievement in research by an outstanding early career economist”, was the Principal Investigator of the European Research Council Grant (ERC) “MacroNets: Production Networks in Macroeconomics” and is currently the recipient of a Leverhulme Prize Fellowship and of an ERC Consolidator Grant, “Micro2Macro”.
Stephen Hansen (University College London)
Professor of Economics at University College London and Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research and CESifo
Stephen Hansen (University College London)
Professor of Economics at University College London and Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research and CESifo
Stephen Hansen is Professor of Economics at University College London and Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research and CESifo. He previously held positions at Imperial College London, the University of Oxford, and Pompeu Fabra University. He received his PhD in Economics from the London School of Economics in 2009. He previously served as an academic consultant at the Bank of England, and a Fellow at the Alan Turing Institute. He currently sits on the scientific advisory board of the Ifo Institute and holds European Research Council Consolidator and Proof-of-Concept Grants. His research has been published in leading international journals, including the Quarterly Journal of Economics, Journal of Political Economy, Review of Economic Studies, and Journal of Monetary Economics.
Sevi Rodríguez Mora (University of Edinburgh)
Professor of Economics at The University of Edinburgh and research fellow of CEPR
Sevi Rodríguez Mora (University of Edinburgh)
Professor of Economics at The University of Edinburgh and research fellow of CEPR
José V. (Sevi) Rodríguez Mora is Professor of Economics at The University of Edinburgh and research fellow of CEPR. He received his PhD from MIT, has held positions in Pompeu Fabra, Southampton and the Alan Turing Institute, and visited IIES (Stockholm University), EIEF (Rome), the University of Minnesota and the Minneapolis Fed. His research area is Macroeconomics, with a special interest in issues relating to inequality, inheritance, and intergenerational mobility.