London, England, United Kingdom
I am a PhD student in Economics at University College London, specialising in macroeconomics. My research focuses on the interaction between monetary and fiscal policy, household heterogeneity, and macroeconomic modelling. I am particularly interested in how policy coordination shapes aggregate outcomes, inequality, and the transmission of economic shocks. My current projects include studying the equilibrium effects of policy interactions in heterogeneous agent models (HANK) and a paper on Deconstructing Monetary Policy Surprises Using Psychological Theory, which integrates insights from behavioural economics into the understanding of central bank communication and market reactions. I recently visited Princeton University to further develop my research on heterogeneous agents and macro modelling. My broader interests include quantitative macro modelling, policy design, and the empirical identification of monetary and fiscal shocks.
Collaborating on a research project in the Monetary Modelling Division to estimate a UK HANK model using the Sequence-Space Jacobian toolkit.
Collaborating with Prof. Morten O. Ravn on new projects with US data to address questions in the field of macroeconomics.
Conducted primary research on the latest European-related issues.