Professor of Public Health Economics and Deputy Pro Vice Chancellor
University of Exeter
Richard has experience with a wide range of economic methods, including micro-, macro-, behavioural-, and political-economic techniques, applied to various areas. He has pioneered the macro-economic modelling of communicable and non-communicable diseases and the economic analysis of the impact of trade and trade agreements on health across a range of areas. Most recently he has focussed on the assessment of fiscal measures related to public health, including several projects related to the economics of food systems, several of which have included aspects related to climate and environment.