Tim Besley is School Professor of Economics and Political Science and W Arthur Lewis Professor of Development Economics at the London School of Economics. He served on the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee between 2006 and 2009 and is a member of the UK Government's National Infrastructure Commission. He previously taught at Princeton University, and has been a Co-Editor of the American Economic Review and is currently a managing editor of Economica. His professional honours include being a Fellow of the British Academy, a Fellow of the Econometric Society and a Foreign Honourary Member of the American Economic Association and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has served as President of the European Economic Association (2010), the International Economic Association (2014-17), the Econometric Society (2018) and Royal Economic Society (2021-2). In 2005, he won the prestigious biannual Yrjö Jahnsson Award for his research. He was educated at Oxford University (BA in Philosophy, Politics and Economics, 1st, M.Phil and a D.Phil in Economics) where he became a Prize Fellow of All Souls College. In 2018, he was knighted for services to Economics and Public Policy.
Discussion paper
DP16840 Science as Civil Society: Implications for a Green Transition
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- Civil society 
- Motivated agents 
- Green innovation
Discussion paper
DP16256 Pillars of Prosperity: A Ten-Year Update

VoxEU Column
Bureaucracy and development
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- Development 
- Institutions and economics 
- Bureaucracy 
- Development 
- Ngos 
- Institutions

VoxEU Column
State capacity and development clusters
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- Development 
- Politics and economics 
- Development 
- Conflict 
- Institutions

VoxEU Column
Measuring the impact of malfunctioning credit markets on productivity
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- Financial Markets 
- Poverty and Income Inequality 
- Credit frictions 
- Productivity 
- Credit markets

VoxEU Column
Terror and tourism: How bad news can harm economic development
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- Development 
- Politics and economics 
- bad news bias 
- Terrorism 
- Tourism

VoxEU Column
Sacrificing consumption to mitigate catastrophic risks
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- Environment 
- Greenhouse gases 
- catastrophe 
- Discount rate 
- Emissions 
- Consumption