Martin Gervais

Martin Gervais is an Associate Professor in the economics department at the University of Iowa. He is a macroeconomist who works in diverse areas, such as optimal fiscal policy, housing markets, and the determinants and consequences of borrowing constraints, in particular as they relate to human capital accumulation.

Gervais received a B.A. in Accounting and M.B.A. from Universite Laval in 1991 and 1993 respectively, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Western Ontario in 1995 and 1999 respectively.

Miriam Gensowski

Miriam Gensowski is a Senior Researcher at the Rockwool Foundation Research unit. Prior, she was assistant and associate professor at the University of Copenhagen, Department of Economics.

Miriam's research is focused on human capital, covering labor economics, the economics of education, and applied microeconometrics. In particular, she has worked on the role of multi-dimensional abilities and psychological traits in life outcomes, their dynamics and determinants, the returns to education, intergenerational occupational mobility, and the role of skills on occupational choice.

George-Levi Gayle

George-Levi Gayle is an Associate Professor at Washington University in St. Louis, Department of Economics. His research investigates topics in the field of labor economics, broadly defined. He focuses on three main areas, namely, family and gender issues in labor, the effect of information friction on earnings and compensation and the estimation of semi-parametric models. His recent work investigates how investment in human capital, job assignment and job turnover affect wage determination and the distribution of economic rents in the presence of uncertainty and imperfect information.

Robert Gary-Bobo

Robert Gary-Bobo is Professor of Economics at the University of Paris I Pantheon-Sorbonne and at the Paris School of Economics 2003-2007; currently Professor of Economics at ENSAE (National School of Statistics, France) and researcher at CREST.



He mainly worked on Microeconomic Theory, Game Theory and applications to Public Economics. He recently worked on the Economics of Education, both on theory and applied econometrics.

Carlos Garriga

Prior to joining the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Carlos Garriga was assistant professor of economics at the Department of Economics at Florida State University, and assistant professor of economics at the Universidad de Barcelona (Spain). He has been a visiting professor at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, and the Department of Economics at the University of Minnesota.

Giovanni Gallipoli

Giovanni Gallipoli is a professor at UBC in Vancouver. Giovanni's research focuses on the origins and consequences of economic inequality with a focus on how heterogeneity shapes individual behaviors and aggregate economic outcomes.

Titus Galama

Titus Galama, Ph.D., MBA, is a Senior Economist at the University of  Southern California (USC) Dornsife Center for Economic and Social Research (CESR), and Director of the CESR Center for the Study of Health Inequality (CSHI), Los Angeles, California, U.S.A. Titus is an award-winning astrophysicist who turned to business/management then policy analysis and economics.

Chao Fu

Chao Fu is the Mary Claire Aschenbrenner Phipps Professor of Economics at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Her broad research area is empirical microeconomics that combines economic theories and econometrics tools to study policy relevant questions. Her research covers a wide range of topics, including education, urban policing, worker training, post-disaster reallocation and health insurance systems. A common theme of her research has been evaluating policy impacts from an equilibrium perspective.



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