Sanjeev Goyal

Sanjeev Goyal is Professor of Economics at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge. He has made pioneering contributions to our understanding of social and economic networks, with publications in leading international journals such as Econometrica, American Economic Review, Journal of Political Economy and Review of Economic Studies. In 2007, Princeton University Press published his book Connections: an introduction to the economics of networks. A Chinese translation was published by Beijing University Press in 2010.

Francisco Gomes

Francisco Gomes is currently a Professor of Finance at London Business School. After earning his BA, Dr. Gomes worked at the Bank of Portugal in the economic research department. Following his PhD, he joined London Business School as an Assistant Professor of Finance. Dr. Gomes' research has been published in leading journals, such as the Journal of Finance, the Review of Financial Studies, the Journal of Financial Economics and the American Economic Review. He has also given numerous seminars worldwide.

Benjamin Golub

Benjamin Golub's research focuses on microeconomic theory -- and, in particular, social and economic networks: how these networks form when agents invest strategically in relationships, how information is transmitted through them, and how they mediate important economic processes such as group cooperation. Applications of the research include measuring social segregation and understanding its consequences for polarization of beliefs or behaviors.

Bart Golsteyn

Bart Golsteyn is Professor of Economics at the Department of Macro, International, and Labor Economics at Maastricht University. His research interests are in human capital and social economics.

Golsteyn received an M.Sc. in Economics and Ph.D. in Economics from Maastricht University in 1999 and 2007 respectively.

Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham

Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham is an Assistant Professor at the Yale School of Management. Prior to this, he was a Financial Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. His research interests include consumer finance. econometrics, and social networks. His current work focuses on assessing the costs and benefits of debtor protection policies and understanding the role that consumer debt plays in the macroeconomy.

Limor Golan

Limor Golan is an Associate Professor at Washington University in St. Louis, Department of Economics. Her recent research interests include discrimination and gender gaps in labor market outcomes, the link between fertility, labor supply, parental time investment in children decisions and the intergenerational persistence in education and earnings, and estimation of dynamic general equilibrium models of labor markets with incomplete information.

Andy Glover

Andy Glover is a Senior Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. He is a quantitative macroeconomist, with an interest in how microeconomic heterogeneity interacts with legal institutions and market structures. His recent work is on entrepreneurship, the distributional effects of recessions, and the cyclical consequences of adverse selection in labor markets. Most related to the Market group, he is interested in how human capital accumulation is affected by adverse selection, either between a student and creditors or between college graduates and employers.

Pamela Giustinelli

Pamela Giustinelli is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at Bocconi University. Dr. Giustinelli's primary interests lie in modeling and empirical analysis of decision making under Knightlian uncertainty, especially within-household decision making and interactions within the human capital domain (education, health, labor supply, long-term care).

Rita Ginja

Rita Ginja is an Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Bergen. Her research interests include applied economics, labor economics and development. She has been working on the evaluation of anti-poverty programs in U.S., U.K., and Latin America. Ginja is also studying the changes in within households' allocations in responses to income shocks and to which extent these changes are transferred to children's human capital.

Donna Gilleskie

Donna Gilleskie is Professor of Economics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She studies the economics of individual decisionmaking with regard to health input demand, labor supply behavior, and health production. The approach reflected in my work involves understanding the dynamics of decisionmaking over time and the role of both observed and unobserved individual heterogeneity.

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