I am an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Texas at Austin. My research develops and estimates macroeconomic models to study how expectations, cognitive frictions, and policy credibility shape aggregate dynamics, especially in open economies.
My work sits at the intersection of macroeconomic theory, international economics, and behavioral macroeconomics. I use dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models, bounded-rationality frameworks, and Bayesian econometric methods to examine monetary and fiscal policy transmission, exchange-rate dynamics, international spillovers, and the empirical relevance of departures from full-information rational expectations.
At UT Austin, I teach graduate and undergraduate courses in macroeconomics and time-series econometrics. I received my PhD in Economics from the University of Surrey, where I was awarded the Postgraduate Researcher of the Year prize and held a Turing Fellowship.
PhD Economics
University of surrey