Glenn Loury

Glenn C. Loury is the Merton P. Stoltz Professor of the Social Sciences and Professor of Economics at Brown University. He has taught previously at Boston, Harvard and Northwestern Universities, and the University of Michigan. Professor Loury is a distinguished academic economist who has contributed to a variety of areas in applied microeconomic theory: welfare economics, game theory, industrial organization, natural resource economics, and the economics of income distribution. He has lectured before academic societies throughout the world.

Caitriona Logue

Caitriona Logue's research interests are Applied Econometrics, Early Childhood Development, Economics of Skill Formation, Labour Economics, Development Economics, Field Experiments, Policy Evaluation.



Lance Lochner

Lance Lochner is Professor and CIBC Chair in Human Capital and Productivity in the Department of Economics at the University of Western Ontario. Previous and current research explores: the interaction between human capital and criminal behavior; financial returns to schooling; post-school human capital acquisition; the evolution of earnings inequality in the U.S.; the interaction of early and late investments in human capital; the relationship between family income and early child outcomes as well as educational attainment; an

Jeremy Lise

Jeremy Lise is an assistant professor at University College London (UCL) and a research fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS). He is a board member of the Review of Economic Studies; associate editor of the European Economic Review; member of the Network on Family Inequality, Becker Friedman Institute; and member of the Centre for Macroeconomics (CFM).

Lise received a B.A. (Honours) in Economics from the University of Guelph in 1998, an M.A. in Economics from McMaster University in 1999, and a Ph.D. in Economics from Queen's University in 2006.

Arthur Lewbel

Arthur Lewbel is a Professor of Economics at Boston College, in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA. He is the inaugural holder of the Barbara A. and Patrick E. Roche Chair in Economics at BC. He is a co-editor of Econometric Theory, a former co-editor of The Journal of Business and Economic Statistics and of Economics Letters, and has also served on the editorial boards of The Journal of Econometrics and The Journal of Applied Econometrics.

Rasmus Lentz

Rasmus Lentz is a Professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Prior to this, he was Assistant Professor at Boston University (2002-2005),  and Assistant Professor at the Wisconsin–Madison, Associate Professor. Lentz's research lies in the intersection of macro and labor economics with a particular focus on the impact of worker and firm heterogeneity on labor market outcomes.

Lentz received an M.A. in Economics from the University of Copenhagen in 1997, and a Ph.D. in Economics from Northwestern University in 2002.

Donghoon Lee

Donghoon Lee is a senior economist in the Microeconomics Studies Function at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. His primary research interests include labor economics and household finance. He has been working on estimation of equilibrium models in the US labor market, developing econometric and computational methods, and empirical works on household finance in the area of housing finance and education finance.

Lee received a B.A. from Seoul National University in 1996, and a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 2001.

Valerie Lechene

Valerie Lechne is currently a Reader (Associate Professor) at University College London and a Research Fellow at IFS. She is an applied microeconomist, interested in understanding the behaviour of individuals, both theoretically and empirically, with the aim of informing policy. Her research focuses on modelling intra-household behaviour in order to understand how individuals interact to reach the decisions whose consequences we see. She is particularly interested in applying these models in the context of developing economies. She also work on consumption and health.

David Lagakos

David Lagakos is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of California San Diego. Previously, he has worked as an Assistant Professor of Economics at Arizona State University from 2009 to 2013. Before that he was a research economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. His research focuses on economic growth, productivity, human capital and labor markets.

Tom Krebs

Tom Krebs is a macroeconomist with a strong interest in heterogeneous-agent models. He is currently a professor of economics at Mannheim University. Before joining Mannheim University, he has been on the faculty at Brown University, University of Illinois-UC, and Syracuse University.

Krebs received his B.A. in physics from the University of Hamburg (Germany) and his Ph.D. in economics from Columbia University.

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