National Institute of Economic and Social Research

National Institute of Economic and Social Research

The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) is Britain's longest established independent economic research institute and think-tank located in London, England. It was established in 1938 with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Pilgrim Trust, the Leverhulme Trust and the Halley Stewart Trust.[1][2]

Institute staff are organised into three groups: macroeconomics and finance; employment; and productivity, innovation and skills. Research themes covered by the National Institute include health and well-being, policy evaluation, welfare, migration, Britain in the EU, inequality poverty and disadvantage, families early years and early intervention, education training and skills and employment policy and practice.

Dr. Martin Weale, CBE, was the Institute Director from 1995-2011. From 2011 to late 2015, the position was held by Jonathan Portes, previously, Chief Economist at the Cabinet Office. The current Director is Jagjit Chadha, who took up the position in May 2016.

Lord Burns was President from 2003-2010, followed by Sir Nicholas Monck from 2011-2013. The current President is Sir Charles Bean.[1]

The National Institute is independent of all party political interests, and receives no core funding from government or other sources. They are not affiliated to any single university, although staff regularly undertake projects in collaboration with leading academic institutions. Funding is received through commissioned research projects from a variety of sources: government departments and agencies, the research councils, particularly the Economic and Social Research Council, the European Commission, charitable foundations, and the private sector.[1]

NiGEM

The most important output of NIESR has been a macroeconomic model called NiGEM which is used to produce quarterly forecasts (published quarterly in the National Institute Economic Review) of the UK and global economy. Forecasts are also published for various other OECD countries.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "About us". National Institute of Economic and Social Research. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  2. "Inflation 'set to soar to 4% by late 2017'". BBC. 2 November 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2016. NIESR is the UK's oldest independent economic research body and was founded in 1938.

External links

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