Neil is the Deputy CEO at Oxford Economics. He has over 15 years' experience and oversees the economic consultancy team as well as the development of the Global Economic model, Global Scenarios, Megatrends and Global Climate services.
He also leads projects for large corporate and financials clients to develop business planning scenarios covering demographic, technological, geopolitical, policy, climate and transition developments. His team supports the delivery of a large number regulatory stress scenarios for financial institutions including the PRA, MAS, and HKMA along with supporting clients with IFRS 9/CECL requirements. Building on his work developing the Global Economic Model he also works with clients to develop organization specific modelling enhancements to aid with financial planning and decision making.
Some of his recent research focus has been on the economic impact of temperature volatility on economic growth. This research builds on the work of Burke et al 2015 to focus on the role of the temperature anomaly instead of levels leading to significantly more economically consequential economic impact than previously estimated.
Neil is the Managing Director of the Macro Modelling and Scenarios team at Oxford Economics. He has over 15 years' experience and oversees the production and development of the Global Economic model, Global Scenarios, Megatrends and Global Climate services.
He also leads projects for large corporate and financials clients to develop business planning scenarios covering demographic, technological, geopolitical, policy, climate and transition developments. His team supports the delivery of a large number regulatory stress scenarios for financial institutions including the PRA, MAS, and HKMA along with supporting clients with IFRS 9/CECL requirements. Building on his work developing the Global Economic Model he also works with clients to develop organization specific modelling enhancements to aid with financial planning and decision making.
Some of his recent research focus has been on the economic impact of temperature volatility on economic growth. This research builds on the work of Burke et al 2015 to focus on the role of the temperature anomaly instead of levels leading to significantly more economically consequential economic impact than previously estimated.