Bio
I'm a PhD candidate in Economics at the University of Manchester. I previously completed an MPhil at the University of Cambridge and a BSc at the University of Surrey, both in Finance and Economics. Before joining Manchester, I worked as an antitrust and competition economist at Charles River Associates and as an assistant economist in macro modelling at Oxford Economics.
Research
My research is in quantitative macroeconomics, with a focus on heterogeneous-agent models, household finance, and macro-public finance. I study how incomplete markets, household risk, and expectation formation shape saving behaviour, wealth accumulation, inequality, and optimal policy. My current work incorporates diagnostic expectations (overreaction), into quantitative macroeconomic models to examine how belief distortions affect wealth inequality. In related work, I study optimal taxation in Aiyagari-style economies, focusing on the interaction between tax policy, household heterogeneity, and precautionary saving motives.
Main Field: Quantitative Macroeconomics
Research Interests: Heterogeneous-Agent Models, Expectation Formation, Wealth Inequality, Macro-Public Finance
You can find my CV here.