I am a post-doctoral researcher at the J.E. Cairnes School of Business & Economics, University of Galway, where I work on the ACACIA (Horizon Europe) project, focusing on improving climate services for at-risk communities in Madagascar.  

My research interests include, but not limited to, development economics, gender, behavioural finance, and public health. I specialise in using both experimental and observational data to inform evidence-based policy, with a research approach that integrates interdisciplinary and mixed methods, including causal inference and qualitative analysis. I have led multiple field and online experiments, collaborating with academics from Swarthmore College and Trinity College Dublin, and practitioners from the World Bank, Women’s World Banking, and the Central Bank of Ireland. 

Before joining the postdoctoral fellowship, I worked as an Associate Economist at the Behavioural Consumer Finance Unit of the Central Bank of Ireland, where I conducted research in behavioural finance related to short-term credit products, sustainability, and consumer fraud.

I completed my PhD from Trinity College Dublin. I also hold a Master’s in Quantitative Economics from Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona (IDEA program) and a bachelor’s degree (honours) in Mathematics from St. Stephen’s College, Delhi.

To view a list of my research projects, click here.

To view my CV, click here.